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<br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/></div>
<h1> A WODEHOUSE MISCELLANY </h1>
<h2> Articles & Stories </h2>
<h2> By P. G. Wodehouse </h2>
<blockquote>
<p><b>[Transcriber's note:</b> This collection of early Wodehouse writings
was assembled for Project Gutenberg. Original publication dates for the
stories are shown.]</p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<h3> CONTENTS </h3>
<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto" cellpadding="4" border="3">
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>ARTICLES</b> </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> SOME ASPECTS OF GAME-CAPTAINCY </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> AN UNFINISHED COLLECTION </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE NEW ADVERTISING </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE SECRET PLEASURES OF REGINALD </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> MY BATTLE WITH DRINK </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> IN DEFENSE OF ASTIGMATISM </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> PHOTOGRAPHERS AND ME </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> A PLEA FOR INDOOR GOLF </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE ALARMING SPREAD OF POETRY </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> MY LIFE AS A DRAMATIC CRITIC </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE AGONIES OF WRITING A MUSICAL COMEDY </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> ON THE WRITING OF LYRICS </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> THE PAST THEATRICAL SEASON </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> <b>POEMS</b> </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> DAMON AND PYTHIAS </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> THE HAUNTED TRAM </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> <b>STORIES</b> </SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> WHEN PAPA SWORE IN HINDUSTANI</SPAN>
</td>
<td>
1901
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> TOM, DICK, AND HARRY</SPAN>
</td>
<td>
1905
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> JEEVES TAKES CHARGE</SPAN>
</td>
<td>
1916
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> DISENTANGLING OLD DUGGIE</SPAN>
</td>
<td>
1912
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ARTICLES </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SOME ASPECTS OF GAME-CAPTAINCY </h2>
<p>To the Game-Captain (of the football variety) the world is peopled by
three classes, firstly the keen and regular player, next the partial
slacker, thirdly, and lastly, the entire, abject and absolute slacker.</p>
<p>Of the first class, the keen and regular player, little need be said. A
keen player is a gem of purest rays serene, and when to his keenness he
adds regularity and punctuality, life ceases to become the mere hollow
blank that it would otherwise become, and joy reigns supreme.</p>
<p>The absolute slacker (to take the worst at once, and have done with it)
needs the pen of a Swift before adequate justice can be done to his
enormities. He is a blot, an excrescence. All those moments which are not
spent in avoiding games (by means of that leave which is unanimously
considered the peculiar property of the French nation) he uses in
concocting ingenious excuses. Armed with these, he faces with calmness the
disgusting curiosity of the Game-Captain, who officiously desires to know
the reason of his non-appearance on the preceding day. These excuses are
of the "had-to-go-and-see-a-man-about-a-dog" type, and rarely meet with
that success for which their author hopes. In the end he discovers that
his chest is weak, or his heart is subject to palpitations, and he
forthwith produces a document to this effect, signed by a doctor. This has
the desirable result of muzzling the tyrannical Game-Captain, whose sole
solace is a look of intense and withering scorn. But this is seldom fatal,
and generally, we rejoice to say, ineffectual.</p>
<p>The next type is the partial slacker. He differs from the absolute slacker
in that at rare intervals he actually turns up, changed withal into the
garb of the game, and thirsting for the fray. At this point begins the
time of trouble for the Game-Captain. To begin with, he is forced by
stress of ignorance to ask the newcomer his name. This is, of course, an
insult of the worst kind. "A being who does not know my name," argues the
partial slacker, "must be something not far from a criminal lunatic." The
name is, however, extracted, and the partial slacker strides to the arena.
Now arises insult No. 2. He is wearing his cap. A hint as to the
advisability of removing this pihce de risistance not being taken, he is
ordered to assume a capless state, and by these means a coolness springs
up between him and the G. C. Of this the Game-Captain is made aware when
the game commences. The partial slacker, scorning to insert his head in
the scrum, assumes a commanding position outside and from this point
criticises the Game-Captain's decisions with severity and pith. The last
end of the partial slacker is generally a sad one. Stung by some pungent
home-thrust, the Game-Captain is fain to try chastisement, and by these
means silences the enemy's battery.</p>
<p>Sometimes the classes overlap. As for instance, a keen and regular player
may, by some more than usually gross bit of bungling on the part of the
G.-C., be moved to a fervour and eloquence worthy of Juvenal. Or, again,
even the absolute slacker may for a time emulate the keen player, provided
an opponent plant a shrewd kick on a tender spot. But, broadly speaking,
there are only three classes.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AN UNFINISHED COLLECTION </h2>
<p>A silence had fallen upon the smoking room. The warrior just back from the
front had enquired after George Vanderpoop, and we, who knew that George's
gentle spirit had, to use a metaphor after his own heart, long since been
withdrawn from circulation, were feeling uncomfortable and wondering how
to break the news.</p>
<p>Smithson is our specialist in tact, and we looked to him to be spokesman.</p>
<p>"George," said Smithson at last, "the late George Vanderpoop——"</p>
<p>"Late!" exclaimed the warrior; "is he dead?"</p>
<p>"As a doornail," replied Smithson sadly. "Perhaps you would care to hear
the story. It is sad, but interesting. You may recollect that, when you
sailed, he was starting his journalistic career. For a young writer he had
done remarkably well. The <i>Daily Telephone</i> had printed two of his
contributions to their correspondence column, and a bright pen picture of
his, describing how Lee's Lozenges for the Liver had snatched him from
almost certain death, had quite a vogue. Lee, I believe, actually
commissioned him to do a series on the subject."</p>
<p>"Well?" said the warrior.</p>
<p>"Well, he was, as I say, prospering very fairly, when in an unlucky moment
he began to make a collection of editorial rejection forms. He had always
been a somewhat easy prey to scourges of that description. But when he had
passed safely through a sharp attack of Philatelism and a rather nasty
bout of Autographomania, everyone hoped and believed that he had turned
the corner. The progress of his last illness was very rapid. Within a year
he wanted but one specimen to make the complete set. This was the one
published from the offices of the <i>Scrutinizer</i>. All the rest he had
obtained with the greatest ease. I remember his telling me that a single
short story of his, called 'The Vengeance of Vera Dalrymple,' had been
instrumental in securing no less than thirty perfect specimens. Poor
George! I was with him when he made his first attempt on the <i>Scrutinizer</i>.
He had baited his hook with an essay on Evolution. He read me one or two
passages from it. I stopped him at the third paragraph, and congratulated
him in advance, little thinking that it was sympathy rather than
congratulations that he needed. When I saw him a week afterwards he was
looking haggard. I questioned him, and by slow degrees drew out the story.
The article on Evolution had been printed.</p>
<p>"'Never say die, George,' I said. 'Send them "Vera Dalrymple." No paper
can take that.'</p>
<p>"He sent it. The <i>Scrutinizer</i>, which had been running for nearly a
century without publishing a line of fiction, took it and asked for more.
It was as if there were an editorial conspiracy against him."</p>
<p>"Well?" said the man of war.</p>
<p>"Then," said Smithson, "George pulled himself together. He wrote a parody
of 'The Minstrel Boy.' I have seen a good many parodies, but never such a
parody as that. By return of post came a long envelope bearing the crest
of the <i>Scrutinizer</i>. 'At last,' he said, as he tore it open.</p>
<p>"'George, old man,' I said, 'your hand.'</p>
<p>"He looked at me a full minute. Then with a horrible, mirthless laugh he
fell to the ground, and expired almost instantly. You will readily guess
what killed him. The poem had been returned, <i>but without a rejection
form!</i>"</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE NEW ADVERTISING </h2>
<p>"In Denmark," said the man of ideas, coming into the smoking room, "I see
that they have original ideas on the subject of advertising. According to
the usually well-informed Daily Lyre, all 'bombastic' advertising is
punished with a fine. The advertiser is expected to describe his wares in
restrained, modest language. In case this idea should be introduced into
England, I have drawn up a few specimen advertisements which, in my
opinion, combine attractiveness with a shrinking modesty at which no
censor could cavil."</p>
<p>And in spite of our protests, he began to read us his first effort,
descriptive of a patent medicine.</p>
<p>"It runs like this," he said:</p>
<p>Timson's Tonic for Distracted Deadbeats<br/>
Has been known to cure<br/>
We Hate to Seem to Boast,<br/>
but<br/>
Many Who have Tried It Are Still<br/>
Alive<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Take a Dose or Two in Your Spare Time<br/>
It's Not Bad Stuff<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Read what an outside stockbroker says:<br/>
"Sir—After three months' steady absorption of your Tonic<br/>
I was no worse."<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>We do not wish to thrust ourselves forward in any way. If<br/>
you prefer other medicines, by all means take them. Only we<br/>
just thought we'd mention it—casually, as it were—that TIMSON'S<br/>
is PRETTY GOOD.<br/></p>
<p>"How's that?" inquired the man of ideas. "Attractive, I fancy, without
being bombastic. Now, one about a new novel. Ready?"</p>
<p>MR. LUCIEN LOGROLLER'S LATEST<br/>
<br/>
The Dyspepsia of the Soul<br/>
The Dyspepsia of the Soul<br/>
The Dyspepsia of the Soul<br/>
<br/>
Don't buy it if you don't want to, but just<br/>
listen to a few of the criticisms.<br/>
<br/>
THE DYSPEPSIA OF THE SOUL<br/>
<br/>
"Rather ... rubbish."—<i>Spectator</i><br/>
<br/>
"We advise all insomniacs to read Mr. Logroller's soporific<br/>
pages."—<i>Outlook</i><br/>
<br/>
"Rot."—<i>Pelican</i><br/>
<br/>
THE DYSPEPSIA OF THE SOUL<br/>
Already in its first edition.<br/></p>
<p>"What do you think of that?" asked the man of ideas.</p>
<p>We told him.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE SECRET PLEASURES OF REGINALD </h2>
<p>I found Reggie in the club one Saturday afternoon. He was reclining in a
long chair, motionless, his eyes fixed glassily on the ceiling. He frowned
a little when I spoke. "You don't seem to be doing anything," I said.</p>
<p>"It's not what I'm doing, it's what I am <i>not</i> doing that matters."</p>
<p>It sounded like an epigram, but epigrams are so little associated with
Reggie that I ventured to ask what he meant.</p>
<p>He sighed. "Ah well," he said. "I suppose the sooner I tell you, the
sooner you'll go. Do you know Bodfish?"</p>
<p>I shuddered. "Wilkinson Bodfish? I do."</p>
<p>"Have you ever spent a weekend at Bodfish's place in the country?"</p>
<p>I shuddered again. "I have."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm <i>not</i> spending the weekend at Bodfish's place in the
country."</p>
<p>"I see you're not. But——"</p>
<p>"You don't understand. I do not mean that I am simply absent from
Bodfish's place in the country. I mean that I am <i>deliberately</i> not
spending the weekend there. When you interrupted me just now, I was not
strolling down to Bodfish's garage, listening to his prattle about his new
car."</p>
<p>I glanced around uneasily.</p>
<p>"Reggie, old man, you're—you're not—This hot weather——"</p>
<p>"I am perfectly well, and in possession of all my faculties. Now tell me.
Can you imagine anything more awful than to spend a weekend with Bodfish?"</p>
<p>On the spur of the moment I could not.</p>
<p>"Can you imagine anything more delightful, then, than <i>not</i> spending
a weekend with Bodfish? Well, that's what I'm doing now. Soon, when you
have gone—if you have any other engagements, please don't let me
keep you—I shall not go into the house and not listen to Mrs.
Bodfish on the subject of young Willie Bodfish's premature intelligence."</p>
<p>I got his true meaning. "I see. You mean that you will be thanking your
stars that you aren't with Bodfish."</p>
<p>"That is it, put crudely. But I go further. I don't indulge in a mere
momentary self-congratulation, I do the thing thoroughly. If I were
weekending at Bodfish's, I should have arrived there just half an hour
ago. I therefore selected that moment for beginning not to weekend with
Bodfish. I settled myself in this chair and I did not have my back slapped
at the station. A few minutes later I was not whirling along the country
roads, trying to balance the car with my legs and an elbow. Time passed,
and I was not shaking hands with Mrs. Bodfish. I have just had the most
corking half-hour, and shortly—when you have remembered an
appointment—I shall go on having it. What I am really looking
forward to is the happy time after dinner. I shall pass it in not playing
bridge with Bodfish, Mrs. Bodfish, and a neighbor. Sunday morning is the
best part of the whole weekend, though. That is when I shall most enjoy
myself. Do you know a man named Pringle? Next Saturday I am not going to
stay with Pringle. I forget who is not to be my host the Saturday after
that. I have so many engagements of this kind that I lose track of them."</p>
<p>"But, Reggie, this is genius. You have hit on the greatest idea of the
age. You might extend this system of yours."</p>
<p>"I do. Some of the jolliest evenings I have spent have been not at the
theatre."</p>
<p>"I have often wondered what it was that made you look so fit and happy."</p>
<p>"Yes. These little non-visits of mine pick me up and put life into me for
the coming week. I get up on Monday morning feeling like a lion. The
reason I selected Bodfish this week, though I was practically engaged to a
man named Stevenson who lives out in Connecticut, was that I felt rundown
and needed a real rest. I shall be all right on Monday."</p>
<p>"And so shall I," I said, sinking into the chair beside him.</p>
<p>"You're not going to the country?" he asked regretfully.</p>
<p>"I am not. I, too, need a tonic. I shall join you at Bodfish's. I really
feel a lot better already."</p>
<p>I closed my eyes, and relaxed, and a great peace settled upon me.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MY BATTLE WITH DRINK </h2>
<p>I could tell my story in two words—the two words "I drank." But I
was not always a drinker. This is the story of my downfall—and of my
rise—for through the influence of a good woman, I have, thank
Heaven, risen from the depths.</p>
<p>The thing stole upon me gradually, as it does upon so many young men. As a
boy, I remember taking a glass of root beer, but it did not grip me then.
I can recall that I even disliked the taste. I was a young man before
temptation really came upon me. My downfall began when I joined the
Yonkers Shorthand and Typewriting College.</p>
<p>It was then that I first made acquaintance with the awful power of
ridicule. They were a hard-living set at college—reckless youths.
They frequented movie palaces. They thought nothing of winding up an
evening with a couple of egg-phosphates and a chocolate fudge. They
laughed at me when I refused to join them. I was only twenty. My character
was undeveloped. I could not endure their scorn. The next time I was
offered a drink I accepted. They were pleased, I remember. They called me
"Good old Plum!" and a good sport and other complimentary names. I was
intoxicated with sudden popularity.</p>
<p>How vividly I can recall that day! The shining counter, the placards
advertising strange mixtures with ice cream as their basis, the busy men
behind the counter, the half-cynical, half-pitying eyes of the girl in the
cage where you bought the soda checks. She had seen so many happy, healthy
boys through that little hole in the wire netting, so many thoughtless
boys all eager for their first soda, clamoring to set their foot on the
primrose path that leads to destruction.</p>
<p>It was an apple marshmallow sundae, I recollect. I dug my spoon into it
with an assumption of gaiety which I was far from feeling. The first
mouthful almost nauseated me. It was like cold hair-oil. But I stuck to
it. I could not break down now. I could not bear to forfeit the newly-won
esteem of my comrades. They were gulping their sundaes down with the speed
and enjoyment of old hands. I set my teeth, and persevered, and by degrees
a strange exhilaration began to steal over me. I felt that I had burnt my
boats and bridges; that I had crossed the Rubicon. I was reckless. I
ordered another round. I was the life and soul of that party.</p>
<p>The next morning brought remorse. I did not feel well. I had pains,
physical and mental. But I could not go back now. I was too weak to
dispense with my popularity. I was only a boy, and on the previous evening
the captain of the Checkers Club, to whom I looked up with an almost
worshipping reverence, had slapped me on the back and told me that I was a
corker. I felt that nothing could be excessive payment for such an honor.
That night I gave a party at which orange phosphate flowed like water. It
was the turning point.</p>
<p>I had got the habit!</p>
<p>I will pass briefly over the next few years. I continued to sink deeper
and deeper into the slough. I knew all the drugstore clerks in New York by
their first names, and they called me by mine. I no longer even had to
specify the abomination I desired. I simply handed the man my ten cent
check and said: "The usual, Jimmy," and he understood.</p>
<p>At first, considerations of health did not trouble me. I was young and
strong, and my constitution quickly threw off the effects of my
dissipation. Then, gradually, I began to feel worse. I was losing my grip.
I found a difficulty in concentrating my attention on my work. I had dizzy
spells. I became nervous and distrait. Eventually I went to a doctor. He
examined me thoroughly, and shook his head.</p>
<p>"If I am to do you any good," he said, "you must tell me all. You must
hold no secrets from me."</p>
<p>"Doctor," I said, covering my face with my hands, "I am a confirmed
soda-fiend."</p>
<p>He gave me a long lecture and a longer list of instructions. I must take
air and exercise and I must become a total abstainer from sundaes of all
descriptions. I must avoid limeade like the plague, and if anybody offered
me a Bulgarzoon I was to knock him down and shout for the nearest
policeman.</p>
<p>I learned then for the first time what a bitterly hard thing it is for a
man in a large and wicked city to keep from soda when once he has got the
habit. Everything was against me. The old convivial circle began to shun
me. I could not join in their revels and they began to look on me as a
grouch. In the end, I fell, and in one wild orgy undid all the good of a
month's abstinence. I was desperate then. I felt that nothing could save
me, and I might as well give up the struggle. I drank two pin-ap-o-lades,
three grapefruit-olas and an egg-zoolak, before pausing to take breath.</p>
<p>And then, the next day, I met May, the girl who effected my reformation.
She was a clergyman's daughter who, to support her widowed mother, had
accepted a non-speaking part in a musical comedy production entitled "Oh
Joy! Oh Pep!" Our acquaintance ripened, and one night I asked her out to
supper.</p>
<p>I look on that moment as the happiest of my life. I met her at the stage
door, and conducted her to the nearest soda-fountain. We were inside and I
was buying the checks before she realized where she was, and I shall never
forget her look of mingled pain and horror.</p>
<p>"And I thought you were a live one!" she murmured.</p>
<p>It seemed that she had been looking forward to a little lobster and
champagne. The idea was absolutely new to me. She quickly convinced me,
however, that such was the only refreshment which she would consider, and
she recoiled with unconcealed aversion from my suggestion of a Mocha
Malted and an Eva Tanguay. That night I tasted wine for the first time,
and my reformation began.</p>
<p>It was hard at first, desperately hard. Something inside me was trying to
pull me back to the sundaes for which I craved, but I resisted the
impulse. Always with her divinely sympathetic encouragement, I gradually
acquired a taste for alcohol. And suddenly, one evening, like a flash it
came upon me that I had shaken off the cursed yoke that held me down: that
I never wanted to see the inside of a drugstore again. Cocktails, at first
repellent, have at last become palatable to me. I drink highballs for
breakfast. I am saved.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> IN DEFENSE OF ASTIGMATISM </h2>
<p>This is peculiarly an age where novelists pride themselves on the breadth
of their outlook and the courage with which they refuse to ignore the
realities of life; and never before have authors had such scope in the
matter of the selection of heroes. In the days of the old-fashioned novel,
when the hero was automatically Lord Blank or Sir Ralph Asterisk, there
were, of course, certain rules that had to be observed, but today—why,
you can hardly hear yourself think for the uproar of earnest young
novelists proclaiming how free and unfettered they are. And yet, no writer
has had the pluck to make his hero wear glasses.</p>
<p>In the old days, as I say, this was all very well. The hero was a young
lordling, sprung from a line of ancestors who had never done anything with
their eyes except wear a piercing glance before which lesser men quailed.
But now novelists go into every class of society for their heroes, and
surely, at least an occasional one of them must have been astigmatic.
Kipps undoubtedly wore glasses; so did Bunker Bean; so did Mr. Polly,
Clayhanger, Bibbs, Sheridan, and a score of others. Then why not say so?</p>
<p>Novelists are moving with the times in every other direction. Why not in
this?</p>
<p>It is futile to advance the argument that glasses are unromantic. They are
not. I know, because I wear them myself, and I am a singularly romantic
figure, whether in my rimless, my Oxford gold-bordered, or the plain
gent's spectacles which I wear in the privacy of my study.</p>
<p>Besides, everybody wears glasses nowadays. That is the point I wish to
make. For commercial reasons, if for no others, authors ought to think
seriously of this matter of goggling their heroes. It is an admitted fact
that the reader of a novel likes to put himself in the hero's place—to
imagine, while reading, that he is the hero. What an audience the writer
of the first romance to star a spectacled hero will have. All over the
country thousands of short-sighted men will polish their glasses and
plunge into his pages. It is absurd to go on writing in these days for a
normal-sighted public. The growing tenseness of life, with its small
print, its newspapers read by artificial light, and its flickering motion
pictures, is whittling down the section of the populace which has perfect
sight to a mere handful.</p>
<p>I seem to see that romance. In fact, I think I shall write it myself.
"'Evadne,' murmured Clarence, removing his pince-nez and polishing them
tenderly....'" "'See,' cried Clarence, 'how clearly every leaf of yonder
tree is mirrored in the still water of the lake. I can't see myself,
unfortunately, for I have left my glasses on the parlor piano, but don't
worry about me: go ahead and see!" ... "Clarence adjusted his
tortoiseshell-rimmed spectacles with a careless gesture, and faced the
assassins without a tremor." Hot stuff? Got the punch? I should say so. Do
you imagine that there will be a single man in this country with the price
of the book in his pocket and a pair of pince-nez on his face who will not
scream and kick like an angry child if you withhold my novel from him?</p>
<p>And just pause for a moment to think of the serial and dramatic rights of
the story. All editors wear glasses, so do all theatrical managers. My
appeal will be irresistible. All I shall have to do will be to see that
the check is for the right figure and to supervise the placing of the
electric sign</p>
<p>SPECTACLES OF FATE<br/>
<br/>
BY P. G. WODEHOUSE<br/></p>
<p>over the doors of whichever theatre I happen to select for the production
of the play.</p>
<p>Have you ever considered the latent possibilities for dramatic situations
in short sight? You know how your glasses cloud over when you come into a
warm room out of the cold? Well, imagine your hero in such a position. He
has been waiting outside the murderer's den preparatory to dashing in and
saving the heroine. He dashes in. "Hands up, you scoundrels," he cries.
And then his glasses get all misty, and there he is, temporarily blind,
with a full-size desperado backing away and measuring the distance in
order to hand him one with a pickaxe.</p>
<p>Or would you prefer something less sensational, something more in the
romantic line? Very well. Hero, on his way to the Dowager Duchess's ball,
slips on a banana-peel and smashes his only pair of spectacles. He dare
not fail to attend the ball, for the dear Duchess would never forgive him;
so he goes in and proposes to a girl he particularly dislikes because she
is dressed in pink, and the heroine told him that she was going to wear
pink. But the heroine's pink dress was late in coming home from the
modiste's and she had to turn up in blue. The heroine comes in just as the
other girl is accepting him, and there you have a nice, live, peppy,
kick-off for your tale of passion and human interest.</p>
<p>But I have said enough to show that the time has come when novelists, if
they do not wish to be left behind in the race, must adapt themselves to
modern conditions. One does not wish to threaten, but, as I say, we
astigmatics are in a large minority and can, if we get together, make our
presence felt. Roused by this article to a sense of the injustice of their
treatment, the great army of glass-wearing citizens could very easily make
novelists see reason. A boycott of non-spectacled heroes would soon
achieve the necessary reform. Perhaps there will be no need to let matters
go as far as that. I hope not. But, if this warning should be neglected,
if we have any more of these novels about men with keen gray eyes or
snapping black eyes or cheerful blue eyes—any sort of eyes, in fact,
lacking some muscular affliction, we shall know what to do.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PHOTOGRAPHERS AND ME </h2>
<p>I look in my glass, dear reader, and what do I see? Nothing so frightfully
hot, believe me. The face is slablike, the ears are large and fastened on
at right-angles. Above the eyebrows comes a stagnant sea of bald forehead,
stretching away into the distance with nothing to relieve it but a few
wisps of lonely hair. The nose is blobby, the eyes dull, like those of a
fish not in the best of health. A face, in short, taking it for all in
all, which should be reserved for the gaze of my nearest and dearest who,
through long habit, have got used to it and can see through to the pure
white soul beneath. At any rate, a face not to be scattered about at
random and come upon suddenly by nervous people and invalids.</p>
<p>And yet, just because I am an author, I have to keep on being
photographed. It is the fault of publishers and editors, of course,
really, but it is the photographer who comes in for the author's hate.</p>
<p>Something has got to be done about this practice of publishing authors'
photographs. We have to submit to it, because editors and publishers
insist. They have an extraordinary superstition that it helps an author's
sales. The idea is that the public sees the photograph, pauses spell-bound
for an instant, and then with a cry of ecstasy rushes off to the book-shop
and buys copy after copy of the gargoyle's latest novel.</p>
<p>Of course, in practice, it works out just the other way. People read a
review of an author's book and are told that it throbs with a passion so
intense as almost to be painful, and are on the point of digging
seven-and-sixpence out of their child's money-box to secure a copy, when
their eyes fall on the man's photograph at the side of the review, and
they find that he has a face like a rabbit and wears spectacles and a low
collar. And this man is the man who is said to have laid bare the soul of
a woman as with a scalpel.</p>
<p>Naturally their faith is shaken. They feel that a man like that cannot
possibly know anything about Woman or any other subject except where to go
for a vegetarian lunch, and the next moment they have put down the
hair-pin and the child is seven-and-six in hand and the author his ten per
cent., or whatever it is, to the bad. And all because of a photograph.</p>
<p>For the ordinary man, the recent introduction of high-art methods into
photography has done much to diminish the unpleasantness of the operation.
In the old days of crude and direct posing, there was no escape for the
sitter. He had to stand up, backed by a rustic stile and a flabby canvas
sheet covered with exotic trees, glaring straight into the camera. To
prevent any eleventh-hour retreat, a sort of spiky thing was shoved firmly
into the back of his head leaving him with the choice of being taken as he
stood or having an inch of steel jabbed into his skull. Modern methods
have changed all that.</p>
<p>There are no photographs nowadays. Only "camera portraits" and "lens
impressions." The full face has been abolished. The ideal of the
present-day photographer is to eliminate the sitter as far as possible and
concentrate on a general cloudy effect. I have in my possession two
studies of my Uncle Theodore—one taken in the early 'nineties, the
other in the present year. The first shows him, evidently in pain, staring
before him with a fixed expression. In his right hand he grasps a scroll.
His left rests on a moss-covered wall. Two sea-gulls are flying against a
stormy sky.</p>
<p>As a likeness, it is almost brutally exact. My uncle stands forever
condemned as the wearer of a made-up tie.</p>
<p>The second is different in every respect. Not only has the sitter been
taken in the popular modern "one-twentieth face," showing only the back of
the head, the left ear and what is either a pimple or a flaw in the print,
but the whole thing is plunged in the deepest shadow. It is as if my uncle
had been surprised by the camera while chasing a black cat in his
coal-cellar on a moonlight night. There is no question as to which of the
two makes the more attractive picture. My family resemble me in that
respect. The less you see of us, the better we look.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A PLEA FOR INDOOR GOLF </h2>
<p>Indoor golf is that which is played in the home. Whether you live in a
palace or a hovel, an indoor golf-course, be it only of nine holes, is
well within your reach. A house offers greater facilities than an
apartment, and I have found my game greatly improved since I went to live
in the country. I can, perhaps, scarcely do better than give a brief
description of the sporting nine-hole course which I have recently laid
out in my present residence.</p>
<p>All authorities agree that the first hole on every links should be
moderately easy, in order to give the nervous player a temporary and
fictitious confidence.</p>
<p>At Wodehouse Manor, therefore, we drive off from the front door—in
order to get the benefit of the door-mat—down an entry fairway,
carpeted with rugs and without traps. The hole—a loving-cup—is
just under the stairs; and a good player ought to have no difficulty in
doing it in two.</p>
<p>The second hole, a short and simple one, takes you into the telephone
booth. Trouble begins with the third, a long dog-leg hole through the
kitchen into the dining-room. This hole is well trapped with table-legs,
kitchen utensils, and a moving hazard in the person of Clarence the cat,
who is generally wandering about the fairway. The hole is under the
glass-and-china cupboard, where you are liable to be bunkered if you loft
your approach-shot excessively.</p>
<p>The fourth and fifth holes call for no comment. They are without traps,
the only danger being that you may lose a stroke through hitting the maid
if she happens to be coming down the back stairs while you are taking a
mashie-shot. This is a penalty under the local rule.</p>
<p>The sixth is the indispensable water-hole. It is short, but tricky. Teeing
off from just outside the bathroom door, you have to loft the ball over
the side of the bath, holing out in the little vent pipe, at the end where
the water runs out.</p>
<p>The seventh is the longest hole on the course. Starting at the entrance of
the best bedroom, a full drive takes you to the head of the stairs, whence
you will need at least two more strokes to put you dead on the pin in the
drawing-room. In the drawing-room the fairway is trapped with photograph
frames—with glass, complete—these serving as casual water: and
anyone who can hole out on the piano in five or under is a player of
class. Bogey is six, and I have known even such a capable exponent of the
game as my Uncle Reginald, who is plus two on his home links on Park
Avenue, to take twenty-seven at the hole. But on that occasion he had the
misfortune to be bunkered in a photograph of my Aunt Clara and took no
fewer than eleven strokes with his niblick to extricate himself from it.</p>
<p>The eighth and ninth holes are straightforward, and can be done in two and
three respectively, provided you swing easily and avoid the canary's cage.
Once trapped there, it is better to give up the hole without further
effort. It is almost impossible to get out in less than fifty-six, and
after you have taken about thirty the bird gets visibly annoyed.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ALARMING SPREAD OF POETRY </h2>
<p>To the thinking man there are few things more disturbing than the
realization that we are becoming a nation of minor poets. In the good old
days poets were for the most part confined to garrets, which they left
only for the purpose of being ejected from the offices of magazines and
papers to which they attempted to sell their wares. Nobody ever thought of
reading a book of poems unless accompanied by a guarantee from the
publisher that the author had been dead at least a hundred years. Poetry,
like wine, certain brands of cheese, and public buildings, was rightly
considered to improve with age; and no connoisseur could have dreamed of
filling himself with raw, indigestible verse, warm from the maker.</p>
<p>Today, however, editors are paying real money for poetry; publishers are
making a profit on books of verse; and many a young man who, had he been
born earlier, would have sustained life on a crust of bread, is now
sending for the manager to find out how the restaurant dares try to sell a
fellow champagne like this as genuine Pommery Brut. Naturally this is
having a marked effect on the life of the community. Our children grow to
adolescence with the feeling that they can become poets instead of
working. Many an embryo bill clerk has been ruined by the heady knowledge
that poems are paid for at the rate of a dollar a line. All over the
country promising young plasterers and rising young motormen are throwing
up steady jobs in order to devote themselves to the new profession. On a
sunny afternoon down in Washington Square one's progress is positively
impeded by the swarms of young poets brought out by the warm weather. It
is a horrible sight to see those unfortunate youths, who ought to be
sitting happily at desks writing "Dear Sir, Your favor of the tenth inst.
duly received and contents noted. In reply we beg to state...." wandering
about with their fingers in their hair and their features distorted with
the agony of composition, as they try to find rhymes to "cosmic" and
"symbolism."</p>
<p>And, as if matters were not bad enough already, along comes Mr. Edgar Lee
Masters and invents <i>vers libre</i>. It is too early yet to judge the
full effects of this man's horrid discovery, but there is no doubt that he
has taken the lid off and unleashed forces over which none can have any
control. All those decent restrictions which used to check poets have
vanished, and who shall say what will be the outcome?</p>
<p>Until Mr. Masters came on the scene there was just one thing which, like a
salient fortress in the midst of an enemy's advancing army, acted as a
barrier to the youth of the country. When one's son came to one and said,
"Father, I shall not be able to fulfill your dearest wish and start work
in the fertilizer department. I have decided to become a poet," although
one could no longer frighten him from his purpose by talking of garrets
and starvation, there was still one weapon left. "What about the rhymes,
Willie?" you replied, and the eager light died out of the boy's face, as
he perceived the catch in what he had taken for a good thing. You pressed
your advantage. "Think of having to spend your life making one line rhyme
with another! Think of the bleak future, when you have used up 'moon' and
'June,' 'love' and 'dove,' 'May' and 'gay'! Think of the moment when you
have ended the last line but one of your poem with 'windows' or 'warmth'
and have to buckle to, trying to make the thing couple up in accordance
with the rules! What then, Willie?"</p>
<p>Next day a new hand had signed on in the fertilizer department.</p>
<p>But now all that has changed. Not only are rhymes no longer necessary, but
editors positively prefer them left out. If Longfellow had been writing
today he would have had to revise "The Village Blacksmith" if he wanted to
pull in that dollar a line. No editor would print stuff like:</p>
<p>Under the spreading chestnut tree<br/>
The village smithy stands.<br/>
The smith a brawny man is he<br/>
With large and sinewy hands.<br/></p>
<p>If Longfellow were living in these hyphenated, free and versy days, he
would find himself compelled to take his pen in hand and dictate as
follows:</p>
<p>In life I was the village smith,<br/>
I worked all day<br/>
But<br/>
I retained the delicacy of my complexion<br/>
Because<br/>
I worked in the shade of the chestnut tree<br/>
Instead of in the sun<br/>
Like Nicholas Blodgett, the expressman.<br/>
I was large and strong<br/>
Because<br/>
I went in for physical culture<br/>
And deep breathing<br/>
And all those stunts.<br/>
I had the biggest biceps in Spoon River.<br/></p>
<p>Who can say where this thing will end? <i>Vers libre</i> is within the
reach of all. A sleeping nation has wakened to the realization that there
is money to be made out of chopping its prose into bits. Something must be
done shortly if the nation is to be saved from this menace. But what? It
is no good shooting Edgar Lee Masters, for the mischief has been done, and
even making an example of him could not undo it. Probably the only hope
lies in the fact that poets never buy other poets' stuff. When once we
have all become poets, the sale of verse will cease or be limited to the
few copies which individual poets will buy to give to their friends.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MY LIFE AS A DRAMATIC CRITIC </h2>
<p>I had always wanted to be a dramatic critic. A taste for sitting back and
watching other people work, so essential to the make-up of this
sub-species of humanity, has always been one of the leading traits in my
character.</p>
<p>I have seldom missed a first night. No sooner has one periodical got rid
of me than another has had the misfortune to engage me, with the result
that I am now the foremost critic of the day, read assiduously by
millions, fawned upon by managers, courted by stagehands. My lightest word
can make or mar a new production. If I say a piece is bad, it dies. It may
not die instantly. Generally it takes forty weeks in New York and a couple
of seasons on the road to do it, but it cannot escape its fate. Sooner or
later it perishes. That is the sort of man I am.</p>
<p>Whatever else may be charged against me, I have never deviated from the
standard which I set myself at the beginning of my career. If I am called
upon to review a play produced by a manager who is considering one of my
own works, I do not hesitate. I praise that play.</p>
<p>If an actor has given me a lunch, I refuse to bite the hand that has fed
me. I praise that actor's performance. I can only recall one instance of
my departing from my principles. That was when the champagne was corked,
and the man refused to buy me another bottle.</p>
<p>As is only natural, I have met many interesting people since I embarked on
my career. I remember once lunching with rare Ben Jonson at the Mermaid
Tavern—this would be back in Queen Elizabeth's time, when I was
beginning to be known in the theatrical world—and seeing a young man
with a nobby forehead and about three inches of beard doing himself well
at a neighboring table at the expense of Burbage the manager.</p>
<p>"Ben," I asked my companion, "who is that youth?" He told me that the
fellow was one Bacon, a new dramatist who had learned his technique by
holding horses' heads in the Strand, and who, for some reason or other,
wrote under the name of Shakespeare. "You must see his <i>Hamlet</i>,"
said Ben enthusiastically. "He read me the script last night. They start
rehearsals at the Globe next week. It's a pippin. In the last act every
blamed character in the cast who isn't already dead jumps on everyone
else's neck and slays him. It's a skit, you know, on these foolish tragedies
which every manager is putting on just now. Personally, I think it's the
best thing since <i>The Prune-Hater's Daughter</i>."</p>
<p>I was skeptical at the moment, but time proved the correctness of my old
friend's judgment; and, having been present after the opening performance
at a little supper given by Burbage at which sack ran like water, and
anybody who wanted another malvoisie and seltzer simply had to beckon to
the waiter, I was able to conscientiously praise it in the highest terms.</p>
<p>I still treasure the faded newspaper clipping which contains the
advertisement of the play, with the legend, "Shakespeare has put one over.
A scream from start to finish."—Wodehouse, in <i>The Weekly
Bear-Baiter</i> (with which is incorporated <i>The Scurvy Knaves' Gazette</i>).</p>
<p>The lot of a dramatic critic is, in many respects, an enviable one.
Lately, there has been the growing practice among critics of roasting a
play on the morning after production, and then having another go at it in
the Sunday edition under the title of "Second Swats" or "The Past Week in
the Theatre," which has made it pretty rocky going for dramatists who thus
get it twice in the same place, and experience the complex emotions of the
commuter who, coming home in the dark, trips over the baby's cart and
bumps his head against the hat stand.</p>
<p>There is also no purer pleasure than that of getting into a theatre on
what the poet Milton used to call "the nod." I remember Brigham Young
saying to me once with not unnatural chagrin, "You're a lucky man,
Wodehouse. It doesn't cost you a nickel to go to a theatre. When I want to
take in a show with the wife, I have to buy up the whole of the orchestra
floor. And even then it's a tight fit."</p>
<p>My fellow critics and I escape this financial trouble, and it gives us a
good deal of pleasure, when the male star is counting the house over the
heroine's head (during their big love scene) to see him frown as he
catches sight of us and hastily revise his original estimate.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE AGONIES OF WRITING A MUSICAL COMEDY </h2>
<h3> Which Shows Why Librettists Pick at the Coverlet </h3>
<p>The trouble about musical comedy, and the reason why a great many
otherwise kindly and broadminded persons lie in wait round the corner with
sudden scowls, their whole being intent on beating it with a brick the
moment it shows its head, is that, from outside, it looks too easy.</p>
<p>You come into the crowded theatre and consider that each occupant of an
orchestra chair is contributing three or four cents to the upkeep of a
fellow who did nothing but dash off the stuff that keeps the numbers
apart, and your blood boils. A glow of honest resentment fills you at the
thought of anyone having such an absolute snap. You little know what the
poor bird has suffered, and how inadequate a reward are his few yens per
week for what he has been through. Musical comedy is not dashed off. It
grows—slowly and painfully, and each step in its growth either
bleaches another tuft of the author's hair or removes it from the parent
skull altogether.</p>
<p>The average musical comedy comes into being because somebody—not the
public, but a manager—wants one. We will say that Mr. and Mrs.
Whoosis, the eminent ballroom dancers, have decided that they require a
different sphere for the exhibition of their talents. They do not demand a
drama. They commission somebody to write them a musical comedy. Some poor,
misguided creature is wheedled into signing a contract: and, from that
moment, his troubles begin.</p>
<p>An inspiration gives him a pleasing and ingenious plot. Full of optimism,
he starts to write it. By the time he has finished an excellent first act,
he is informed that Mr. and Mrs. Whoosis propose to sing three solos and
two duets in the first act and five in the second, and will he kindly
build his script accordingly? This baffles the author a little. He is
aware that both artistes, though extremely gifted northward as far as the
ankle-bone, go all to pieces above that level, with the result that by the
time you reach the zone where the brains and voice are located, there is
nothing stirring whatever. And he had allowed for this in his original
conception of the play, by making Mrs. Whoosis a deaf-mute and Mr. Whoosis
a Trappist monk under the perpetual vow of silence. The unfolding of the
plot he had left to the other characters, with a few ingenious gaps where
the two stars could come on and dance.</p>
<p>He takes a stiff bracer, ties a vinegar-soaked handkerchief round his
forehead, and sets to work to remodel his piece. He is a trifle
discouraged, but he perseveres. With almost superhuman toil he contrives
the only possible story which will fit the necessities of the case. He has
wrapped up the script and is about to stroll round the corner to mail it,
when he learns from the manager who is acting as intermediary between the
parties concerned in the production that there is a slight hitch. Instead
of having fifty thousand dollars deposited in the bank to back the play,
it seems that the artistes merely said in their conversation that it would
be awfully jolly if they <i>did</i> have that sum, or words to that
effect.</p>
<p>By this time our author has got the thing into his system: or, rather, he
has worked so hard that he feels he cannot abandon the venture now. He
hunts for another manager who wants something musical, and at length finds
one. The only proviso is that this manager does not need a piece built
around two stars, but one suited to the needs of Jasper Cutup, the
well-known comedian, whom he has under contract. The personality of Jasper
is familiar to the author, so he works for a month or two and remoulds the
play to fit him. With the script under his arm he staggers to the
manager's office. The manager reads the script—smiles—chuckles—thoroughly
enjoys it. Then a cloud passes athwart his brow. "There's only one thing
the matter with this piece," he says. "You seem to have written it to star
a comedian." "But you said you wanted it for Jasper Cutup," gasps the
author, supporting himself against the water-cooler. "Well, yes, that is
so," replies the manager. "I remember I did want a piece for him then, but
he's gone and signed up with K. and Lee. What I wish you would do is to
take this script and twist it to be a vehicle for Pansy Glucose."</p>
<p>"Pansy Glucose?" moans the author. "The ingenue?" "Yes," says the manager.
"It won't take long. Just turn your Milwaukee pickle manufacturer into a
debutante, and the thing is done. Get to work as soon as you can. I want
this rushed."</p>
<p>All this is but a portion of the musical comedy author's troubles. We will
assume that he eventually finds a manager who really does put the piece
into rehearsal. We will even assume that he encounters none of the trials
to which I have alluded. We will even go further and assume that he is
commissioned to write a musical comedy without any definite stellar
personality in mind, and that when he has finished it the manager will do
his share by providing a suitable cast. Is he in soft? No, dear reader, he
is not in soft. You have forgotten the "Gurls." Critics are inclined to
reproach, deride, blame and generally hammer the author of a musical
comedy because his plot is not so consecutive and unbroken as the plot of
a farce or a comedy. They do not realize the conditions under which he is
working. It is one of the immutable laws governing musical plays that at
certain intervals during the evening the audience demand to see the
chorus. They may not be aware that they so demand, but it is nevertheless
a fact that, unless the chorus come on at these fixed intervals, the
audience's interest sags. The raciest farce-scenes cannot hold them, nor
the most tender love passages. They want the gurls, the whole gurls, and
nothing but the gurls.</p>
<p>Thus it comes about that the author, having at last finished his first
act, is roused from his dream of content by a horrid fear. He turns to the
script, and discovers that his panic was well grounded. He has carelessly
allowed fully twenty pages to pass without once bringing on the chorus.</p>
<p>This is where he begins to clutch his forehead and to grow gray at the
temples. He cannot possibly shift musical number four, which is a chorus
number, into the spot now occupied by musical number three, which is a
duet, because three is a "situation" number, rooted to its place by the
exigencies of the story. The only thing to do is to pull the act to pieces
and start afresh. And when you consider that this sort of thing happens
not once but a dozen times between the start of a musical comedy book and
its completion, can you wonder that this branch of writing is included
among the dangerous trades and that librettists always end by picking at
the coverlet?</p>
<p>Then there is the question of cast. The author builds his hero in such a
manner that he requires an actor who can sing, dance, be funny, and carry
a love interest. When the time comes to cast the piece, he finds that the
only possible man in sight wants fifteen hundred a week and, anyway, is
signed up for the next five years with the rival syndicate. He is then
faced with the alternative of revising his play to suit either: a) Jones,
who can sing and dance, but is not funny; b) Smith, who is funny, but
cannot sing and dance; c) Brown, who is funny and can sing and dance, but
who cannot carry a love-interest and, through working in revue, has
developed a habit of wandering down to the footlights and chatting with
the audience. Whichever actor is given the job, it means more rewriting.</p>
<p>Overcome this difficulty, and another arises. Certain scenes are
constructed so that A gets a laugh at the expense of B; but B is a
five-hundred-a-week comedian and A is a two-hundred-a-week juvenile, and B
refuses to "play straight" even for an instant for a social inferior. The
original line is such that it cannot be simply switched from one to the
other. The scene has to be entirely reconstructed and further laugh lines
thought of. Multiply this by a hundred, and you will begin to understand
why, when you see a librettist, he is generally lying on his back on the
sidewalk with a crowd standing round, saying, "Give him air."</p>
<p>So, do not grudge the librettist his thousand a week or whatever it is.
Remember what he has suffered and consider his emotions on the morning
after the production when he sees lines which he invented at the cost of
permanently straining his brain, attributed by the critics to the
impromptu invention of the leading comedian. Of all the saddest words of
tongue or pen, the saddest—to a musical comedy author—are
these in the morning paper: "The bulk of the humor was sustained by Walter
Wiffle, who gagged his way merrily through the piece."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ON THE WRITING OF LYRICS </h2>
<p>The musical comedy lyric is an interesting survival of the days, long
since departed, when poets worked. As everyone knows, the only real
obstacle in the way of turning out poetry by the mile was the fact that
you had to make the darned stuff rhyme.</p>
<p>Many lyricists rhyme as they pronounce, and their pronunciation is simply
horrible. They can make "home" rhyme with "alone," and "saw" with "more,"
and go right off and look their innocent children in the eye without a
touch of shame.</p>
<p>But let us not blame the erring lyricist too much. It isn't his fault that
he does these things. It is the fault of the English language. Whoever
invented the English language must have been a prose-writer, not a
versifier; for he has made meagre provision for the poets. Indeed, the
word "you" is almost the only decent chance he has given them. You can do
something with a word like "you." It rhymes with "sue," "eyes of blue,"
"woo," and all sorts of succulent things, easily fitted into the fabric of
a lyric. And it has the enormous advantage that it can be repeated thrice
at the end of a refrain when the composer has given you those three long
notes, which is about all a composer ever thinks of. When a composer hands
a lyricist a "dummy" for a song, ending thus,</p>
<p>Tiddley-tum, tiddley-tum,<br/>
Pom-pom-pom, pom-pom-pom,<br/>
Tum, tum, tum,<br/></p>
<p>the lyricist just shoves down "You, you, you" for the last line, and then
sets to work to fit the rest of the words to it. I have dwelled on this,
for it is noteworthy as the only bright spot in a lyricist's life, the
only real cinch the poor man has.</p>
<p>But take the word "love."</p>
<p>When the board of directors, or whoever it was, was arranging the
language, you would have thought that, if they had had a spark of pity in
their systems, they would have tacked on to that emotion of thoughts of
which the young man's fancy lightly turns in spring, some word ending in
an open vowel. They must have known that lyricists would want to use
whatever word they selected as a label for the above-mentioned emotion far
more frequently than any other word in the language. It wasn't much to ask
of them to choose a word capable of numerous rhymes. But no, they went and
made it "love," causing vast misery to millions.</p>
<p>"Love" rhymes with "dove," "glove," "above," and "shove." It is true that
poets who print their stuff instead of having it sung take a mean
advantage by ringing in words like "prove" and "move"; but the lyricist is
not allowed to do that. This is the wretched unfairness of the lyricist's
lot. The language gets him both ways. It won't let him rhyme "love" with
"move," and it won't let him rhyme "maternal" with "colonel." If he tries
the first course, he is told that the rhyme, though all right for the eye,
is wrong for the ear. If he tries the second course, they say that the
rhyme, though more or less ninety-nine percent pure for the ear, falls
short when tested by the eye. And, when he is driven back on one of the
regular, guaranteed rhymes, he is taunted with triteness of phrase.</p>
<p>No lyricist wants to keep linking "love" with "skies above" and "turtle
dove," but what can he do? You can't do a thing with "shove"; and "glove"
is one of those aloof words which are not good mixers. And—mark the
brutality of the thing—there is no word you can substitute for
"love." It is just as if they did it on purpose.</p>
<p>"Home" is another example. It is the lyricist's staff of life. But all he
can do is to roam across the foam, if he wants to use it. He can put in
"Nome," of course, as a pinch-hitter in special crises, but very seldom;
with the result that his poetic soul, straining at its bonds, goes and
uses "alone," "bone," "tone," and "thrown," exciting hoots of derision.</p>
<p>But it is not only the paucity of rhymes that sours the lyricist's life.
He is restricted in his use of material, as well. If every audience to
which a musical comedy is destined to play were a metropolitan audience,
all might be well; but there is the "road" to consider. And even a
metropolitan audience likes its lyrics as much as possible in the language
of everyday. That is one of the thousand reasons why new Gilberts do not
arise. Gilbert had the advantage of being a genius, but he had the
additional advantage of writing for a public which permitted him to use
his full vocabulary, and even to drop into foreign languages, even Latin
and a little Greek when he felt like it. (I allude to that song in "The
Grand Duke.")</p>
<p>And yet the modern lyricist, to look on the bright side, has advantages
that Gilbert never had. Gilbert never realised the possibilities of
Hawaii, with its admirably named beaches, shores, and musical instruments.
Hawaii—capable as it is of being rhymed with "higher"—has done
much to sweeten the lot—and increase the annual income of an
industrious and highly respectable but down-trodden class of the
community.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PAST THEATRICAL SEASON </h2>
<p>And the Six Best Performances by Unstarred Actors</p>
<p>What lessons do we draw from the past theatrical season?</p>
<p>In the first place, the success of <i>The Wanderer</i> proves that the day
of the small and intimate production is over and that what the public
wants is the large spectacle. In the second place, the success of <i>Oh,
Boy!</i>—(I hate to refer to it, as I am one of the trio who
perpetrated it; but, honestly, we're simply turning them away in droves,
and Rockefeller has to touch Morgan for a bit if he wants to buy a ticket
from the speculators)—proves that the day of the large spectacle is
over and that what the public wants is the small and intimate production.</p>
<p>Then, the capacity business done by <i>The Thirteenth Chair</i> shows
clearly that what the proletariat demands nowadays, is the plotty piece
and that the sun of the bright dialogue comedy has set; while the capacity
business done by <i>A Successful Calamity</i> shows clearly that the
number of the plotty piece is up.</p>
<p>You will all feel better and more able to enjoy yourselves now that a
trained critical mind has put you right on this subtle point.</p>
<p>No review of a theatrical season would be complete without a tabulated
list—or even an untabulated one—of the six best performances
by unstarred actors during the past season.</p>
<p>The present past season—that is to say, the past season which at
present is the last season—has been peculiarly rich in hot efforts
by all sorts of performers. My own choice would be: 1. Anna Wheaton, in <i>Oh,
Boy!</i> 2. Marie Carroll, in the piece at the Princess Theatre. 3. Edna
May Oliver, in Comstock and Elliott's new musical comedy. 4. Tom Powers,
in the show on the south side of 39th Street. 5. Hal Forde, in the
successor to <i>Very Good, Eddie</i>. 6. Stephen Maley, in <i>Oh, Boy!</i></p>
<p>You would hardly credit the agony it gives me to allude, even in passing,
to the above musical milange, but one must be honest to one's public. In
case there may be any who dissent from my opinion, I append a
supplementary list of those entitled to honorable mention: 1. The third
sheep from the O. P. side in <i>The Wanderer</i>. 2. The trick lamp in <i>Magic</i>.
3. The pink pajamas in <i>You're in Love</i>. 4. The knife in <i>The
Thirteenth Chair</i>. 5. The Confused Noise Without in <i>The Great Divide</i>.
6. Jack Merritt's hair in <i>Oh, Boy!</i></p>
<p>There were few discoveries among the dramatists. Of the older playwrights,
Barrie produced a new one and an ancient one, but the Shakespeare boom, so
strong last year, petered out. There seems no doubt that the man, in spite
of a flashy start, had not the stuff. I understand that some of his things
are doing fairly well on the road. Clare Kummer, whose "Dearie" I have so
frequently sung in my bath, to the annoyance of all, suddenly turned right
round, dropped song-writing, and ripped a couple of hot ones right over
the plate. Mr. Somerset Maugham succeeded in shocking Broadway so that the
sidewalks were filled with blushing ticket-speculators.</p>
<p>Most of the critics have done good work during this season. As for myself,
I have guided the public mind in this magazine soundly and with few
errors. If it were not for the fact that nearly all the plays I praised
died before my review appeared, while the ones I said would not run a week
are still packing them in, I could look back to a flawless season.</p>
<p>As you can see, I have had a very pleasant theatrical season. The weather
was uniformly fine on the nights when I went to the theatre. I was
particularly fortunate in having neighbors at most of the plays who were
not afflicted with coughs or a desire to explain the plot to their wives.
I have shaken hands with A. L. Erlanger and been nodded to on the street
by Lee Shubert. I have broadened my mind by travel on the road with a
theatrical company, with the result that, if you want to get me out of New
York, you will have to use dynamite.</p>
<p>Take it for all in all, a most satisfactory season, full of pregnant
possibilities—and all that sort of thing.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> POEMS </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DAMON AND PYTHIAS </h2>
<p>A Romance</p>
<p>Since Earth was first created,<br/>
Since Time began to fly,<br/>
No friends were e'er so mated,<br/>
So firm as JONES and I.<br/>
Since primal Man was fashioned<br/>
To people ice and stones,<br/>
No pair, I ween, had ever been<br/>
Such chums as I and JONES.<br/>
<br/>
In fair and foulest weather,<br/>
Beginning when but boys,<br/>
We faced our woes together,<br/>
We shared each other's joys.<br/>
Together, sad or merry,<br/>
We acted hand in glove,<br/>
Until—'twas careless, very—<br/>
I chanced to fall in love.<br/>
<br/>
The lady's points to touch on,<br/>
Her name was JULIA WHITE,<br/>
Her lineage high, her scutcheon<br/>
Untarnished; manners, bright;<br/>
Complexion, soft and creamy;<br/>
Her hair, of golden hue;<br/>
Her eyes, in aspect, dreamy,<br/>
In colour, greyish blue.<br/>
<br/>
For her I sighed, I panted;<br/>
I saw her in my dreams;<br/>
I vowed, protested, ranted;<br/>
I sent her chocolate creams.<br/>
Until methought one morning<br/>
I seemed to hear a voice,<br/>
A still, small voice of warning.<br/>
"Does JONES approve your choice?"<br/>
<br/>
To JONES of my affection<br/>
I spoke that very night.<br/>
If he had no objection,<br/>
I said I'd wed Miss WHITE.<br/>
I asked him for his blessing,<br/>
But, turning rather blue,<br/>
He said: "It's most distressing,<br/>
But <i>I</i> adore her, too."<br/>
<br/>
"Then, JONES," I answered, sobbing,<br/>
"My wooing's at an end,<br/>
I couldn't think of robbing<br/>
My best, my only friend.<br/>
The notion makes me furious—<br/>
I'd much prefer to die."<br/>
"Perhaps you'll think it curious,"<br/>
Said JONES, "but so should I."<br/>
<br/>
Nor he nor I would falter<br/>
In our resolve one jot.<br/>
I bade him seek the altar,<br/>
He vowed that he would not.<br/>
"She's yours, old fellow. Make her<br/>
As happy as you can."<br/>
"Not so," said I, "you take her—<br/>
You are the lucky man."<br/>
<br/>
At length—the situation<br/>
Had lasted now a year—<br/>
I had an inspiration,<br/>
Which seemed to make things clear.<br/>
"Supposing," I suggested,<br/>
"We ask Miss WHITE to choose?<br/>
I should be interested<br/>
To hear her private views.<br/>
<br/>
"Perhaps she has a preference—<br/>
I own it sounds absurd—<br/>
But I submit, with deference,<br/>
That she might well be heard.<br/>
In clear, commercial diction<br/>
The case in point we'll state,<br/>
Disclose the cause of friction,<br/>
And leave the rest to Fate."<br/>
<br/>
We did, and on the morrow<br/>
The postman brought us news.<br/>
Miss WHITE expressed her sorrow<br/>
At having to refuse.<br/>
Of all her many reasons<br/>
This seemed to me the pith:<br/>
Six months before (or rather more)<br/>
She'd married Mr. SMITH.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE HAUNTED TRAM </h2>
<p>Ghosts of The Towers, The Grange, The Court,<br/>
Ghosts of the Castle Keep.<br/>
Ghosts of the finicking, "high-life" sort<br/>
Are growing a trifle cheap.<br/>
But here is a spook of another stamp,<br/>
No thin, theatrical sham,<br/>
But a spectre who fears not dirt nor damp:<br/>
He rides on a London tram.<br/>
<br/>
By the curious glance of a mortal eye<br/>
He is not seen. He's heard.<br/>
His steps go a-creeping, creeping by,<br/>
He speaks but a single word.<br/>
You may hear his feet: you may hear them plain,<br/>
For—it's odd in a ghost—they crunch.<br/>
You may hear the whirr of his rattling chain,<br/>
And the ting of his ringing punch.<br/>
<br/>
The gathering shadows of night fall fast;<br/>
The lamps in the street are lit;<br/>
To the roof have the eerie footsteps passed,<br/>
Where the outside passengers sit.<br/>
To the passenger's side has the spectre paced;<br/>
For a moment he halts, they say,<br/>
Then a ring from the punch at the unseen waist,<br/>
And the footsteps pass away.<br/>
<br/>
That is the tale of the haunted car;<br/>
And if on that car you ride<br/>
You won't, believe me, have journeyed far<br/>
Ere the spectre seeks your side.<br/>
Ay, all unseen by your seat he'll stand,<br/>
And (unless it's a wig) your hair<br/>
Will rise at the touch of his icy hand,<br/>
And the sound of his whispered "Fare!"<br/>
<br/>
At the end of the trip, when you're getting down<br/>
(And you'll probably simply fly!)<br/>
Just give the conductor half-a-crown,<br/>
Ask who is the ghost and why.<br/>
And the man will explain with bated breath<br/>
(And point you a moral) thus:<br/>
"'E's a pore young bloke wot wos crushed to death<br/>
By people as fought<br/>
As they didn't ought<br/>
For seats on a crowded bus."<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> STORIES </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHEN PAPA SWORE IN HINDUSTANI </h2>
<p>"Sylvia!"</p>
<p>"Yes, papa."</p>
<p>"That infernal dog of yours——"</p>
<p>"Oh, papa!"</p>
<p>"Yes, that infernal dog of yours has been at my carnations again!"</p>
<p>Colonel Reynolds, V.C., glared sternly across the table at Miss Sylvia
Reynolds, and Miss Sylvia Reynolds looked in a deprecatory manner back at
Colonel Reynolds, V.C.; while the dog in question—a foppish pug—happening
to meet the colonel's eye in transit, crawled unostentatiously under the
sideboard, and began to wrestle with a bad conscience.</p>
<p>"Oh, naughty Tommy!" said Miss Reynolds mildly, in the direction of the
sideboard.</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear," assented the colonel; "and if you could convey to him the
information that if he does it once more—yes, just once more!—I
shall shoot him on the spot you would be doing him a kindness." And the
colonel bit a large crescent out of his toast, with all the energy and
conviction of a man who has thoroughly made up his mind. "At six o'clock
this morning," continued he, in a voice of gentle melancholy, "I happened
to look out of my bedroom window, and saw him. He had then destroyed two
of my best plants, and was commencing on a third, with every appearance of
self-satisfaction. I threw two large brushes and a boot at him."</p>
<p>"Oh, papa! They didn't hit him?"</p>
<p>"No, my dear, they did not. The brushes missed him by several yards, and
the boot smashed a fourth carnation. However, I was so fortunate as to
attract his attention, and he left off."</p>
<p>"I can't think what makes him do it. I suppose it's bones. He's got bones
buried all over the garden."</p>
<p>"Well, if he does it again, you'll find that there will be a few more
bones buried in the garden!" said the colonel grimly; and he subsided into
his paper.</p>
<p>Sylvia loved the dog partly for its own sake, but principally for that of
the giver, one Reginald Dallas, whom it had struck at an early period of
their acquaintance that he and Miss Sylvia Reynolds were made for one
another. On communicating this discovery to Sylvia herself he had found
that her views upon the subject were identical with his own; and all would
have gone well had it not been for a melancholy accident.</p>
<p>One day while out shooting with the colonel, with whom he was doing his
best to ingratiate himself, with a view to obtaining his consent to the
match, he had allowed his sporting instincts to carry him away to such a
degree that, in sporting parlance, he wiped his eye badly. Now, the
colonel prided himself with justice on his powers as a shot; but on this
particular day he had a touch of liver, which resulted in his shooting
over the birds, and under the birds, and on each side of the birds, but
very rarely at the birds. Dallas being in especially good form, it was
found, when the bag came to be counted, that, while he had shot seventy
brace, the colonel had only managed to secure five and a half!</p>
<p>His bad marksmanship destroyed the last remnant of his temper. He swore
for half an hour in Hindustani, and for another half-hour in English.
After that he felt better. And when, at the end of dinner, Sylvia came to
him with the absurd request that she might marry Mr. Reginald Dallas he
did not have a fit, but merely signified in fairly moderate terms his
entire and absolute refusal to think of such a thing.</p>
<p>This had happened a month before, and the pug, which had changed hands in
the earlier days of the friendship, still remained, at the imminent risk
of its life, to soothe Sylvia and madden her father.</p>
<p>It was generally felt that the way to find favour in the eyes of Sylvia—which
were a charming blue, and well worth finding favour in—was to show
an intelligent and affectionate interest in her dog. This was so up to a
certain point; but no farther, for the mournful recollection of Mr. Dallas
prevented her from meeting their advances in quite the spirit they could
have wished.</p>
<p>However, they persevered, and scarcely a week went by in which Thomas was
not rescued from an artfully arranged horrible fate by somebody.</p>
<p>But all their energy was in reality wasted, for Sylvia remembered her
faithful Reggie, who corresponded vigorously every day, and refused to be
put off with worthless imitations. The lovesick swains, however, could not
be expected to know of this, and the rescuing of Tommy proceeded briskly,
now one, now another, playing the rtle of hero.</p>
<p>The very day after the conversation above recorded had taken place a
terrible tragedy occurred.</p>
<p>The colonel, returning from a poor day's shooting, observed through the
mist that was beginning to rise a small form busily engaged in excavating
in the precious carnation-bed. Slipping in a cartridge, he fired; and the
skill which had deserted him during the day came back to him. There was a
yelp; then silence. And Sylvia, rushing out from the house, found the
luckless Thomas breathing his last on a heap of uprooted carnations.</p>
<p>The news was not long in spreading. The cook told the postman, and the
postman thoughtfully handed it on to the servants at the rest of the
houses on his round. By noon it was public property; and in the afternoon,
at various times from two to five, nineteen young men were struck, quite
independently of one another, with a brilliant idea.</p>
<p>The results of this idea were apparent on the following day.</p>
<p>"Is this all?" asked the colonel of the servant, as she brought in a
couple of letters at breakfast-time.</p>
<p>"There's a hamper for Miss Sylvia, sir."</p>
<p>"A hamper, is there? Well, bring it in."</p>
<p>"If you please, sir, there's several of them."</p>
<p>"What? Several? How many are there?"</p>
<p>"Nineteen, sir," said Mary, restraining with some difficulty an
inclination to giggle.</p>
<p>"Eh? What? Nineteen? Nonsense! Where are they?"</p>
<p>"We've put them in the coachhouse for the present, sir. And if you please,
sir, cook says she thinks there's something alive in them."</p>
<p>"Something alive?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. And John says he thinks it's dogs, sir!"</p>
<p>The colonel uttered a sound that was almost a bark, and, followed by
Sylvia, rushed to the coachhouse. There, sure enough, as far as the eye
could reach, were the hampers; and, as they looked, a sound proceeded from
one of them that was unmistakably the plaintive note of a dog that has
been shut up, and is getting tired of it.</p>
<p>Instantly the other eighteen hampers joined in, until the whole coachhouse
rang with the noise.</p>
<p>The colonel subsided against a wall, and began to express himself softly
in Hindustani.</p>
<p>"Poor dears!" said Sylvia. "How stuffy they must be feeling!"</p>
<p>She ran to the house, and returned with a basin of water.</p>
<p>"Poor dears!" she said again. "You'll soon have something to drink."</p>
<p>She knelt down by the nearest hamper, and cut the cord that fastened it. A
pug jumped out like a jack-in-the-box, and rushed to the water. Sylvia
continued her work of mercy, and by the time the colonel had recovered
sufficiently to be able to express his views in English, eighteen more
pugs had joined their companion.</p>
<p>"Get out, you brute!" shouted the colonel, as a dog insinuated itself
between his legs. "Sylvia, put them back again this minute! You had no
business to let them out. Put them back!"</p>
<p>"But I can't, papa. I can't catch them."</p>
<p>She looked helplessly from him to the seething mass of dogs, and back
again.</p>
<p>"Where's my gun?" began the colonel.</p>
<p>"Papa, don't! You couldn't be so cruel! They aren't doing any harm, poor
things!"</p>
<p>"If I knew who sent them——"</p>
<p>"Perhaps there's something to show. Yes; here's a visiting-card in this
hamper."</p>
<p>"Whose is it?" bellowed the colonel through the din.</p>
<p>"J. D'Arcy Henderson, The Firs," read Sylvia, at the top of her voice.</p>
<p>"Young blackguard!" bawled the colonel.</p>
<p>"I expect there's one in each of the hampers. Yes; here's another. W. K.
Ross, The Elms."</p>
<p>The colonel came across, and began to examine the hampers with his own
hand. Each hamper contained a visiting-card, and each card bore the name
of a neighbour. The colonel returned to the breakfast-room, and laid the
nineteen cards out in a row on the table.</p>
<p>"H'm!" he said, at last. "Mr. Reginald Dallas does not seem to be
represented."</p>
<p>Sylvia said nothing.</p>
<p>"No; he seems not to be represented. I did not give him credit for so much
sense." Then he dropped the subject, and breakfast proceeded in silence.</p>
<p>A young gentleman met the colonel on his walk that morning.</p>
<p>"Morning, colonel!" said he.</p>
<p>"Good-morning!" said the colonel grimly.</p>
<p>"Er—colonel, I—er—suppose Miss Reynolds got that dog all
right?"</p>
<p>"To which dog do you refer?"</p>
<p>"It was a pug, you know. It ought to have arrived by this time."</p>
<p>"Yes. I am inclined to think it has. Had it any special characteristics?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't think so. Just an ordinary pug."</p>
<p>"Well, young man, if you will go to my coachhouse, you will find nineteen
ordinary pugs; and if you would kindly select your beast, and shoot it, I
should be much obliged."</p>
<p>"Nineteen?" said the other, in astonishment. "Why, are you setting up as a
dog-fancier in your old age, colonel?"</p>
<p>This was too much for the colonel. He exploded.</p>
<p>"Old age! Confound your impudence! Dog-fancier! No, sir! I have not become
a dog-fancier in what you are pleased to call my old age! But while there
is no law to prevent a lot of dashed young puppies like yourself, sir—like
yourself—sending your confounded pug-dogs to my daughter, who ought
to have known better than to have let them out of their dashed hampers, I
have no defence.</p>
<p>"Dog-fancier! Gad! Unless those dogs are removed by this time to-morrow,
sir, they will go straight to the Battersea Home, where I devoutly trust
they will poison them. Here are the cards of the other gentlemen who were
kind enough to think that I might wish to set up for a dog-fancier in my
old age. Perhaps you will kindly return them to their owners, and tell
them what I have just said." And he strode off, leaving the young man in a
species of trance.</p>
<p>"Sylvia!" said the colonel, on arriving home.</p>
<p>"Yes, papa."</p>
<p>"Do you still want to marry that Dallas fellow? Now, for Heaven's sake,
don't start crying! Goodness knows I've been worried enough this morning
without that. Please answer a plain question in a fairly sane manner. Do
you, or do you not?"</p>
<p>"Of course I do, papa."</p>
<p>"Then you may. He's the furthest from being a fool of any of the young
puppies who live about here, and he knows one end of a gun from the other.
I'll write to him now."</p>
<p>"Dear Dallas" (wrote the colonel),—"I find, on consideration,<br/>
that you are the only sensible person in the neighbourhood. I hope<br/>
you will come to lunch to-day. And if you still want to marry<br/>
my daughter, you may."<br/></p>
<p>To which Dallas replied by return of messenger:</p>
<p>"Thanks for both invitations. I will."<br/></p>
<p>An hour later he arrived in person, and the course of true love pulled
itself together, and began to run smooth again.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TOM, DICK, AND HARRY </h2>
<p>This story will interest and amuse all cricketers, and while from the male
point of view it may serve as a good illustration of the fickleness of
woman and the impossibility of forecasting what course she will take, the
fair sex will find in it an equally shining proof of the colossal vanity
of man.</p>
<p>"It's like this."</p>
<p>Tom Ellison sat down on the bed, and paused.</p>
<p>"Whack it out," said Dick Henley encouragingly.</p>
<p>"We're all friends here, and the password's 'Portland.' What's the
matter?"</p>
<p>"I hate talking to a man when he's shaving. I don't want to have you
cutting your head off."</p>
<p>"Don't worry about me. This is a safety razor. And, anyhow, what's the
excitement? Going to make my flesh creep?"</p>
<p>Tom Ellison kicked uncomfortably at the chair he was trying to balance on
one leg.</p>
<p>"It's so hard to explain."</p>
<p>"Have a dash at it."</p>
<p>"Well, look here, Dick, we've always been pals. What?"</p>
<p>"Of course we have."</p>
<p>"We went to the Empire last Boatrace night together——"</p>
<p>"And got chucked out simultaneously."</p>
<p>"In fact, we've always been pals. What?"</p>
<p>"Of course we have."</p>
<p>"Then, whenever there was a rag on, and a bonner in the quad, you always
knew you could help yourself to my chairs."</p>
<p>"You had the run of mine."</p>
<p>"We've shared each other's baccy."</p>
<p>"And whisky."</p>
<p>"In short, we've always been pals. What?"</p>
<p>"Of course we have."</p>
<p>"Then," said Tom Ellison, "what are you trying to cut me out for?"</p>
<p>"Cut you out?"</p>
<p>"You know what I mean. What do you think I came here for? To play cricket?
Rot! I'd much rather have gone on tour with the Authentics. I came here to
propose to Dolly Burn."</p>
<p>Dick Henley frowned.</p>
<p>"I wish you'd speak of her as Miss Burn," he said austerely.</p>
<p>"There you are, you see," said Tom with sombre triumph; "you oughtn't to
have noticed a thing like that. It oughtn't to matter to you what I call
her. I always think of her as Dolly."</p>
<p>"You've no right to."</p>
<p>"I shall have soon."</p>
<p>"I'll bet you won't."</p>
<p>"How much?"</p>
<p>"Ten to one in anything."</p>
<p>"Done," said Tom. "I mean," he added hastily, "don't be a fool. There are
some things one can't bet on. As you ought to have known," he said primly.</p>
<p>"Now, look here," said Dick, "this thing has got to be settled. You say
I'm trying to cut you out. I like that! We may fairly describe that as
rich. As if my love were the same sort of passing fancy that yours is. You
know you fall in love, as you call it, with every girl you meet."</p>
<p>"I don't."</p>
<p>"Very well. If the subject is painful we won't discuss it. Still, how
about that girl you used to rave about last summer? Ethel Something?"</p>
<p>Tom blushed.</p>
<p>"A mere platonic friendship. We both collected autographs. And, if it
comes to that, how about Dora Thingummy? You had enough to say about her
last winter."</p>
<p>Dick reddened.</p>
<p>"We were on good terms. Nothing more. She always sliced with her brassy.
So did I. It formed a sort of bond."</p>
<p>There was a pause.</p>
<p>"After all," resumed Dick, "I don't see the point of all this. Why rake up
the past? You aren't writing my life."</p>
<p>"You started raking."</p>
<p>"Well, to drop that, what do you propose to do about this? You're a good
chap, Tom, when you aren't making an ass of yourself; but I'm hanged if
I'm going to have you interfering between me and Dolly."</p>
<p>"Miss Burn."</p>
<p>Another pause.</p>
<p>"Look here," said Dick. "Cards on the table. I've loved her since last
Commem."</p>
<p>"So have I."</p>
<p>"We went up the Char together in a Canader. Alone."</p>
<p>"She also did the trip with me. No chaperone."</p>
<p>"Twice with me."</p>
<p>"Same here."</p>
<p>"She gave me a couple of dances at the Oriel ball."</p>
<p>"So she did me. She said my dancing was so much better than the average
young man's."</p>
<p>"She told me I must have had a great deal of practice at waltzing."</p>
<p>"In the matter of photographs," said Tom, "she gave me one."</p>
<p>"Me, too."</p>
<p>"Do you mean 'also' or 'a brace'?" inquired Tom anxiously.</p>
<p>"'Also,'" confessed Dick with reluctance.</p>
<p>"Signed?"</p>
<p>"Rather!"</p>
<p>A third pause.</p>
<p>"I tell you what it is," said Tom; "we must agree on something, or we
shall both get left. All we're doing now is to confuse the poor girl. She
evidently likes us both the same. What I mean is, we're both so alike that
she can't possibly make a choice unless one of us chucks it. You don't
feel like chucking it, Dick. What?"</p>
<p>"You needn't be more of an idiot than you can help."</p>
<p>"I only asked. So we are evidently both determined to stick to it. We
shall have to toss, then, to settle which is to back out and give the
other man a show."</p>
<p>"Toss!" shouted Dick. "For Dolly! Never!"</p>
<p>"But we must do something. You won't back out like a sensible man. We must
settle it somehow."</p>
<p>"It's all right," said Dick. "I've got it. We both seem to have come here
and let ourselves in for this rotten little village match, on a wicket
which will probably be all holes and hillocks, simply for Dolly's sake. So
it's only right that we should let the match decide this thing for us. It
won't be so cold-blooded as tossing. See?"</p>
<p>"You mean——?"</p>
<p>"Whichever of us makes the bigger score today wins. The loser has to keep
absolutely off the grass. Not so much as a look or a remark about the
weather. Then, of course, after the winner has had his innings, if he
hasn't brought the thing off, and she has chucked him, the loser can have
a look in. But not a moment before. Understand?"</p>
<p>"All right."</p>
<p>"It'll give an interest to a rotten match," said Dick.</p>
<p>Tom rose to a point of order.</p>
<p>"There's one objection. You, being a stodgy sort of bat, and having a
habit of sitting on the splice, always get put in first. I'm a hitter, so
they generally shove me in about fourth wicket. In this sort of match the
man who goes in fourth wicket is likely to be not out half a dozen at the
end of the innings. Nobody stays in more than three balls. Whereas you,
going in first, will have time for a decent knock before the rot starts.
Follow?"</p>
<p>"I don't want to take any advantage of you," said Dick condescendingly. "I
shan't need it. We'll see Drew after breakfast and get him to put us both
in first."</p>
<p>The Rev. Henry Drew, cricketing curate, was the captain of the side.</p>
<p>Consulted on the matter after breakfast, the Rev. Henry looked grave. He
was taking this match very seriously, and held decided views on the
subject of managing his team.</p>
<p>"The point is, my dear Ellison," he said, "that I want the bowling broken
a bit before you go in. Then your free, aggressive style would have a
better chance. I was thinking of putting you in fourth wicket. Would not
that suit you?"</p>
<p>"I thought so. Tell him, Dick."</p>
<p>"Look here, Drew," said Dick; "you'll regard what I'm going to say as said
under seal of the confessional and that sort of thing, won't you?"</p>
<p>"I shall, of course, respect any confidence you impart to me, my dear
Henley. What is this dreadful secret?"</p>
<p>Dick explained.</p>
<p>"So you see," he concluded, "it's absolutely necessary that we should
start fair."</p>
<p>The Rev. Henry looked as disturbed as if he had suddenly detected symptoms
of Pelagianism in a member of his Sunday-school class.</p>
<p>"Is such a contest quite——? Is it not a little—um?" he
said.</p>
<p>"Not at all," said Dick, hastening to justify himself and friend. "We must
settle the thing somehow, and neither of us will back out. If we didn't do
this we should have to toss."</p>
<p>"Heaven forbid!" said the curate, shocked.</p>
<p>"Well, is it a deal? Will you put us in first?"</p>
<p>"Very well."</p>
<p>"Thanks," said Tom.</p>
<p>"Good of you," said Dick.</p>
<p>"Don't mention it," said Harry.</p>
<hr />
<p>There are two sorts of country cricket. There is the variety you get at a
country-house, where the wicket is prepared with a care as meticulous as
that in fashion on any county ground; where red marl and such-like aids to
smoothness have been injected into the turf all through the winter; and
where the out-fielding is good and the boundaries spacious. And there is
the village match, where cows are apt to stroll on to the pitch before the
innings and cover-point stands up to his neck in a furze-bush.</p>
<p>The game which was to decide the fate of Tom and Dick belonged to the
latter variety. A pitch had been mown in the middle of a meadow (kindly
lent by Farmer Rollitt on condition that he should be allowed to umpire,
and his eldest son Ted put on to bowl first). The team consisted of
certain horny-handed sons of toil, with terrific golf-shots in the
direction of square-leg, and the enemy's ranks were composed of the same
material. Tom and Dick, in ordinary circumstances, would have gone in to
bat in such a match with a feeling of lofty disdain, as befitting experts
from the civilised world, come to teach the rustic mind what was what.</p>
<p>But on the present occasion the thought of all that depended on their bats
induced a state of nerves which would have done credit to a test match.</p>
<p>"Would you mind taking first b-b-ball, old man?" said Tom.</p>
<p>"All r-right," said Dick. He had been on the point of making the request
himself, but it would not do to let Tom see that he was nervous.</p>
<p>He took guard from Farmer Rollitt, and settled himself into position to
face the first delivery.</p>
<p>Whether it is due to the pure air of the country or to daily manual toil
is not known, but the fact remains that bowlers in village matches,
whatever their other shortcomings, seldom fall short in the matter of
speed. The present trundler, having swung his arm round like a flail,
bounded to the crease and sent down a ball which hummed in the air. It
pitched halfway between the wickets in a slight hollow caused by the foot
of a cow and shot. Dick reached blindly forward, and the next moment his
off-stump was out of the ground.</p>
<p>A howl of approval went up from the supporters of the enemy, lying under
the trees.</p>
<p>Tom sat down, limp with joy. Dick out for a duck! What incredible good
fortune! He began to frame in his mind epigrammatic sentences for use in
the scene which would so shortly take place between Miss Dolly Burn and
himself. The next man came in and played flukily but successfully through
the rest of the over. "Just a single," said Tom to himself as he faced the
bowler at the other end. "Just one solitary single. Miss Burn—may I
call you Dolly? Do you remember that moonlight night? On the Char? In my
Canadian canoe? We two?"</p>
<p>"'S THAT?" shrieked bowler and wicket-keeper as one man.</p>
<p>Tom looked blankly at them. He had not gone within a mile and a half of
the ball, he was certain. And yet—there was the umpire with his hand
raised, as if he were the Pope bestowing a blessing.</p>
<p>He walked quickly back to the trees, flung off his pads, and began to
smoke furiously.</p>
<p>"Well?" said a voice.</p>
<p>Dick was standing before him, grinning like a gargoyle.</p>
<p>"Of all the absolutely delirious decisions——" began Tom.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes," said Dick rudely, "I know all about that. Why, I could hear the
click from where I was sitting. The point is, what's to be done now? We
shall have to settle it on the second innings."</p>
<p>"If there is one."</p>
<p>"Oh, there'll be a second innings all right. There's another man out. On a
wicket like this we shall all be out in an hour, and we'll have the other
side out in another hour, and then we'll start again on this business. I
shall play a big game next innings. It was only that infernal ball
shooting that did me."</p>
<p>"And I," said Tom; "if the umpire has got over his fit of delirium
tremens, or been removed to Colney Hatch, shall almost certainly make a
century."</p>
<p>It was four o'clock by the time Tom and Dick went to the wickets for the
second time. Their side had been headed by their opponents by a dozen on
the first innings—68 to 56.</p>
<p>A splendid spirit of confidence animated the two batsmen. The umpire who
had effected Tom's downfall in the first innings had since received a hard
drive in the small of the back as he turned coyly away to avoid the ball,
and was now being massaged by strong men in the taproom of the village
inn. It was the sort of occurrence, said Tom, which proved once and for
all the existence of an all-seeing, benevolent Providence.</p>
<p>As for Dick, he had smoothed out a few of the more important
mountain-ranges which marred the smoothness of the wicket, and was feeling
that all was right with the world.</p>
<p>The pair started well. The demon bowler of the enemy, having been fjted
considerably under the trees by enthusiastic admirers during the innings
of his side, was a little incoherent in his deliveries. Four full-pitches
did he send down to Dick in his first over, and Dick had placed 16 to his
credit before Tom, who had had to look on anxiously, had opened his
account. Dick was a slow scorer as a rule, but he knew a full-pitch to leg
when he saw one.</p>
<p>From his place at the other crease Tom could see Miss Burn and her mother
sitting under the trees, watching the game.</p>
<p>The sight nerved him. By the time he had played through his first over he
had reduced Dick's lead by half. An oyster would have hit out in such
circumstances, and Tom was always an aggressive batsman. By the end of the
third over the scores were level. Each had made 20.</p>
<p>Enthusiasm ran high amongst the spectators, or such of them as were
natives of the village. Such a stand for the first wicket had not been
seen in all the matches ever played in the neighbourhood. When Tom, with a
nice straight drive (which should have been a 4, but was stopped by a cow
and turned into a single), brought up the century, small boys burst
buttons and octogenarians wept like babes.</p>
<p>The bowling was collared. The demon had long since retired grumbling to
the deep field. Weird trundlers, with actions like nothing else on earth,
had been tried, had fired their ringing shot, and passed. One individual
had gone on with lobs, to the acute delight of everybody except the
fieldsmen who had to retrieve the balls and the above-mentioned cow. And
still Tom and Dick stayed in and smote, while in the west the sun slowly
sank.</p>
<p>The Rev. Henry looked anxious. It was magnificent, but it must not be
overdone. A little more and they would not have time to get the foe out
for the second time. In which case the latter would win on the first
innings. And this thought was as gall to him.</p>
<p>He walked out and addressed the rival captain.</p>
<p>"I think," said he, "we will close our innings."</p>
<p>Tom and Dick made two bee-lines for the scorer and waited palpitatingly
for the verdict.</p>
<p>"What's my score?" panted Tom.</p>
<p>"Fifty-fower, sur."</p>
<p>"And mine?" gasped Dick.</p>
<p>"Fifty-fower, too, sur."</p>
<hr />
<p>"You see, my dear fellows," said the Rev. Henry when they had finished—and
his voice was like unto oil that is poured into a wound—"we had to
win this match, and if you had gone on batting we should not have had time
to get them out. As it is, we shall have to hurry."</p>
<p>"But, hang it——" said Tom.</p>
<p>"But, look here——" said Dick.</p>
<p>"Yes?"</p>
<p>"What on earth are we to do?" said Tom.</p>
<p>"We're in precisely the same hole as we were before," said Dick.</p>
<p>"We don't know how to manage it."</p>
<p>"We're absolutely bunkered."</p>
<p>"Our competition, you see."</p>
<p>"About Miss Burn, don't you know."</p>
<p>"Which is to propose first?"</p>
<p>"We can't settle it."</p>
<p>The Rev. Henry smiled a faint, saintly smile and raised a protesting hand.</p>
<p>"My advice," he said, "is that both of you should refrain from proposing."</p>
<p>"What?" said Dick.</p>
<p>"<i>Wha-at</i>?" said Tom.</p>
<p>"You see," purred the Rev. Henry, "you are both very young fellows.
Probably you do not know your own minds. You take these things too seri——"</p>
<p>"Now, look here," said Tom.</p>
<p>"None of that rot," said Dick.</p>
<p>"I shall propose tonight."</p>
<p>"I shall propose this evening."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't," said the Rev. Henry. "The fact is——"</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"I didn't tell you before, for fear it should put you off your game; but
Miss Burn is engaged already, and has been for three days."</p>
<p>The two rivals started.</p>
<p>"Engaged!" cried Tom.</p>
<p>"Whom to?" hissed Dick.</p>
<p>"Me," murmured Harry.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> JEEVES TAKES CHARGE </h2>
<p>Now, touching this business of old Jeeves—my man, you know—how
do we stand? Lots of people think I'm much too dependent on him. My Aunt
Agatha, in fact, has even gone so far as to call him my keeper. Well, what
I say is: Why not? The man's a genius. From the collar upward he stands
alone. I gave up trying to run my own affairs within a week of his coming
to me. That was about half a dozen years ago, directly after the rather
rummy business of Florence Craye, my Uncle Willoughby's book, and Edwin,
the Boy Scout.</p>
<p>The thing really began when I got back to Easeby, my uncle's place in
Shropshire. I was spending a week or so there, as I generally did in the
summer; and I had had to break my visit to come back to London to get a
new valet. I had found Meadowes, the fellow I had taken to Easeby with me,
sneaking my silk socks, a thing no bloke of spirit could stick at any
price. It transpiring, moreover, that he had looted a lot of other things
here and there about the place, I was reluctantly compelled to hand the
misguided blighter the mitten and go to London to ask the registry office
to dig up another specimen for my approval. They sent me Jeeves.</p>
<p>I shall always remember the morning he came. It so happened that the night
before I had been present at a rather cheery little supper, and I was
feeling pretty rocky. On top of this I was trying to read a book Florence
Craye had given me. She had been one of the house-party at Easeby, and two
or three days before I left we had got engaged. I was due back at the end
of the week, and I knew she would expect me to have finished the book by
then. You see, she was particularly keen on boosting me up a bit nearer
her own plane of intellect. She was a girl with a wonderful profile, but
steeped to the gills in serious purpose. I can't give you a better idea of
the way things stood than by telling you that the book she'd given me to
read was called "Types of Ethical Theory," and that when I opened it at
random I struck a page beginning:—</p>
<p><i>The postulate or common understanding involved in speech is<br/>
certainly co-extensive, in the obligation it carries, with the<br/>
social organism of which language is the instrument, and the<br/>
ends of which it is an effort to subserve.</i><br/></p>
<p>All perfectly true, no doubt; but not the sort of thing to spring on a lad
with a morning head.</p>
<p>I was doing my best to skim through this bright little volume when the
bell rang. I crawled off the sofa and opened the door. A kind of darkish
sort of respectful Johnnie stood without.</p>
<p>"I was sent by the agency, sir," he said. "I was given to understand that
you required a valet."</p>
<p>I'd have preferred an undertaker; but I told him to stagger in, and he
floated noiselessly through the doorway like a healing zephyr. That
impressed me from the start. Meadowes had had flat feet and used to clump.
This fellow didn't seem to have any feet at all. He just streamed in. He
had a grave, sympathetic face, as if he, too, knew what it was to sup with
the lads.</p>
<p>"Excuse me, sir," he said gently.</p>
<p>Then he seemed to flicker, and wasn't there any longer. I heard him moving
about in the kitchen, and presently he came back with a glass on a tray.</p>
<p>"If you would drink this, sir," he said, with a kind of bedside manner,
rather like the royal doctor shooting the bracer into the sick prince. "It
is a little preparation of my own invention. It is the Worcester Sauce
that gives it its colour. The raw egg makes it nutritious. The red pepper
gives it its bite. Gentlemen have told me they have found it extremely
invigorating after a late evening."</p>
<p>I would have clutched at anything that looked like a life-line that
morning. I swallowed the stuff. For a moment I felt as if somebody had
touched off a bomb inside the old bean and was strolling down my throat
with a lighted torch, and then everything seemed suddenly to get all
right. The sun shone in through the window; birds twittered in the
tree-tops; and, generally speaking, hope dawned once more.</p>
<p>"You're engaged!" I said, as soon as I could say anything.</p>
<p>I perceived clearly that this cove was one of the world's wonders, the
sort no home should be without.</p>
<p>"Thank you, sir. My name is Jeeves."</p>
<p>"You can start in at once?"</p>
<p>"Immediately, sir."</p>
<p>"Because I'm due down at Easeby, in Shropshire, the day after tomorrow."</p>
<p>"Very good, sir." He looked past me at the mantelpiece. "That is an
excellent likeness of Lady Florence Craye, sir. It is two years since I
saw her ladyship. I was at one time in Lord Worplesdon's employment. I
tendered my resignation because I could not see eye to eye with his
lordship in his desire to dine in dress trousers, a flannel shirt, and a
shooting coat."</p>
<p>He couldn't tell me anything I didn't know about the old boy's
eccentricity. This Lord Worplesdon was Florence's father. He was the old
buster who, a few years later, came down to breakfast one morning, lifted
the first cover he saw, said "Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Damn all eggs!" in an
overwrought sort of voice, and instantly legged it for France, never to
return to the bosom of his family. This, mind you, being a bit of luck for
the bosom of the family, for old Worplesdon had the worst temper in the
county.</p>
<p>I had known the family ever since I was a kid, and from boyhood up this
old boy had put the fear of death into me. Time, the great healer, could
never remove from my memory the occasion when he found me—then a
stripling of fifteen—smoking one of his special cigars in the
stables. He got after me with a hunting-crop just at the moment when I was
beginning to realise that what I wanted most on earth was solitude and
repose, and chased me more than a mile across difficult country. If there
was a flaw, so to speak, in the pure joy of being engaged to Florence, it
was the fact that she rather took after her father, and one was never
certain when she might erupt. She had a wonderful profile, though.</p>
<p>"Lady Florence and I are engaged, Jeeves," I said.</p>
<p>"Indeed, sir?"</p>
<p>You know, there was a kind of rummy something about his manner. Perfectly
all right and all that, but not what you'd call chirpy. It somehow gave me
the impression that he wasn't keen on Florence. Well, of course, it wasn't
my business. I supposed that while he had been valeting old Worplesdon she
must have trodden on his toes in some way. Florence was a dear girl, and,
seen sideways, most awfully good-looking; but if she had a fault it was a
tendency to be a bit imperious with the domestic staff.</p>
<p>At this point in the proceedings there was another ring at the front door.
Jeeves shimmered out and came back with a telegram. I opened it. It ran:</p>
<p><i>Return immediately. Extremely urgent. Catch first train.<br/>
Florence.</i><br/></p>
<p>"Rum!" I said.</p>
<p>"Sir?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing!"</p>
<p>It shows how little I knew Jeeves in those days that I didn't go a bit
deeper into the matter with him. Nowadays I would never dream of reading a
rummy communication without asking him what he thought of it. And this one
was devilish odd. What I mean is, Florence knew I was going back to Easeby
the day after to-morrow, anyway; so why the hurry call? Something must
have happened, of course; but I couldn't see what on earth it could be.</p>
<p>"Jeeves," I said, "we shall be going down to Easeby this afternoon. Can
you manage it?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, sir."</p>
<p>"You can get your packing done and all that?"</p>
<p>"Without any difficulty, sir. Which suit will you wear for the journey?"</p>
<p>"This one."</p>
<p>I had on a rather sprightly young check that morning, to which I was a
good deal attached; I fancied it, in fact, more than a little. It was
perhaps rather sudden till you got used to it, but, nevertheless, an
extremely sound effort, which many lads at the club and elsewhere had
admired unrestrainedly.</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<p>Again there was that kind of rummy something in his manner. It was the way
he said it, don't you know. He didn't like the suit. I pulled myself
together to assert myself. Something seemed to tell me that, unless I was
jolly careful and nipped this lad in the bud, he would be starting to boss
me. He had the aspect of a distinctly resolute blighter.</p>
<p>Well, I wasn't going to have any of that sort of thing, by Jove! I'd seen
so many cases of fellows who had become perfect slaves to their valets. I
remember poor old Aubrey Fothergill telling me—with absolute tears
in his eyes, poor chap!—one night at the club, that he had been
compelled to give up a favourite pair of brown shoes simply because
Meekyn, his man, disapproved of them. You have to keep these fellows in
their place, don't you know. You have to work the good old
iron-hand-in-the-velvet-glove wheeze. If you give them a what's-its-name,
they take a thingummy.</p>
<p>"Don't you like this suit, Jeeves?" I said coldly.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, what don't you like about it?"</p>
<p>"It is a very nice suit, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, what's wrong with it? Out with it, dash it!"</p>
<p>"If I might make the suggestion, sir, a simple brown or blue, with a hint
of some quiet twill——"</p>
<p>"What absolute rot!"</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<p>"Perfectly blithering, my dear man!"</p>
<p>"As you say, sir."</p>
<p>I felt as if I had stepped on the place where the last stair ought to have
been, but wasn't. I felt defiant, if you know what I mean, and there
didn't seem anything to defy.</p>
<p>"All right, then," I said.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>And then he went away to collect his kit, while I started in again on
"Types of Ethical Theory" and took a stab at a chapter headed
"Idiopsychological Ethics."</p>
<hr />
<p>Most of the way down in the train that afternoon, I was wondering what
could be up at the other end. I simply couldn't see what could have
happened. Easeby wasn't one of those country houses you read about in the
society novels, where young girls are lured on to play baccarat and then
skinned to the bone of their jewellery, and so on. The house-party I had
left had consisted entirely of law-abiding birds like myself.</p>
<p>Besides, my uncle wouldn't have let anything of that kind go on in his
house. He was a rather stiff, precise sort of old boy, who liked a quiet
life. He was just finishing a history of the family or something, which he
had been working on for the last year, and didn't stir much from the
library. He was rather a good instance of what they say about its being a
good scheme for a fellow to sow his wild oats. I'd been told that in his
youth Uncle Willoughby had been a bit of a rounder. You would never have
thought it to look at him now.</p>
<p>When I got to the house, Oakshott, the butler, told me that Florence was
in her room, watching her maid pack. Apparently there was a dance on at a
house about twenty miles away that night, and she was motoring over with
some of the Easeby lot and would be away some nights. Oakshott said she
had told him to tell her the moment I arrived; so I trickled into the
smoking-room and waited, and presently in she came. A glance showed me
that she was perturbed, and even peeved. Her eyes had a goggly look, and
altogether she appeared considerably pipped. "Darling!" I said, and
attempted the good old embrace; but she sidestepped like a bantam weight.</p>
<p>"Don't!"</p>
<p>"What's the matter?"</p>
<p>"Everything's the matter! Bertie, you remember asking me, when you left,
to make myself pleasant to your uncle?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>The idea being, of course, that as at that time I was more or less
dependent on Uncle Willoughby I couldn't very well marry without his
approval. And though I knew he wouldn't have any objection to Florence,
having known her father since they were at Oxford together, I hadn't
wanted to take any chances; so I had told her to make an effort to
fascinate the old boy.</p>
<p>"You told me it would please him particularly if I asked him to read me
some of his history of the family."</p>
<p>"Wasn't he pleased?"</p>
<p>"He was delighted. He finished writing the thing yesterday afternoon, and
read me nearly all of it last night. I have never had such a shock in my
life. The book is an outrage. It is impossible. It is horrible!"</p>
<p>"But, dash it, the family weren't so bad as all that."</p>
<p>"It is not a history of the family at all. Your uncle has written his
reminiscences! He calls them 'Recollections of a Long Life'!"</p>
<p>I began to understand. As I say, Uncle Willoughby had been somewhat on the
tabasco side as a young man, and it began to look as if he might have
turned out something pretty fruity if he had started recollecting his long
life.</p>
<p>"If half of what he has written is true," said Florence, "your uncle's
youth must have been perfectly appalling. The moment we began to read he
plunged straight into a most scandalous story of how he and my father were
thrown out of a music-hall in 1887!"</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"I decline to tell you why."</p>
<p>It must have been something pretty bad. It took a lot to make them chuck
people out of music-halls in 1887.</p>
<p>"Your uncle specifically states that father had drunk a quart and a half
of champagne before beginning the evening," she went on. "The book is full
of stories like that. There is a dreadful one about Lord Emsworth."</p>
<p>"Lord Emsworth? Not the one we know? Not the one at Blandings?"</p>
<p>A most respectable old Johnnie, don't you know. Doesn't do a thing
nowadays but dig in the garden with a spud.</p>
<p>"The very same. That is what makes the book so unspeakable. It is full of
stories about people one knows who are the essence of propriety today, but
who seem to have behaved, when they were in London in the 'eighties, in a
manner that would not have been tolerated in the fo'c'sle of a whaler.
Your uncle seems to remember everything disgraceful that happened to
anybody when he was in his early twenties. There is a story about Sir
Stanley Gervase-Gervase at Rosherville Gardens which is ghastly in its
perfection of detail. It seems that Sir Stanley—but I can't tell
you!"</p>
<p>"Have a dash!"</p>
<p>"No!"</p>
<p>"Oh, well, I shouldn't worry. No publisher will print the book if it's as
bad as all that."</p>
<p>"On the contrary, your uncle told me that all negotiations are settled
with Riggs and Ballinger, and he's sending off the manuscript tomorrow for
immediate publication. They make a special thing of that sort of book.
They published Lady Carnaby's 'Memories of Eighty Interesting Years.'"</p>
<p>"I read 'em!"</p>
<p>"Well, then, when I tell you that Lady Carnaby's Memories are simply not
to be compared with your uncle's Recollections, you will understand my
state of mind. And father appears in nearly every story in the book! I am
horrified at the things he did when he was a young man!"</p>
<p>"What's to be done?"</p>
<p>"The manuscript must be intercepted before it reaches Riggs and Ballinger,
and destroyed!"</p>
<p>I sat up.</p>
<p>This sounded rather sporting.</p>
<p>"How are you going to do it?" I enquired.</p>
<p>"How can I do it? Didn't I tell you the parcel goes off to-morrow? I am
going to the Murgatroyds' dance to-night and shall not be back till
Monday. You must do it. That is why I telegraphed to you."</p>
<p>"What!"</p>
<p>She gave me a look.</p>
<p>"Do you mean to say you refuse to help me, Bertie?"</p>
<p>"No; but—I say!"</p>
<p>"It's quite simple."</p>
<p>"But even if I—What I mean is—Of course, anything I can do—but—if
you know what I mean——"</p>
<p>"You say you want to marry me, Bertie?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course; but still——"</p>
<p>For a moment she looked exactly like her old father.</p>
<p>"I will never marry you if those Recollections are published."</p>
<p>"But, Florence, old thing!"</p>
<p>"I mean it. You may look on it as a test, Bertie. If you have the resource
and courage to carry this thing through, I will take it as evidence that
you are not the vapid and shiftless person most people think you. If you
fail, I shall know that your Aunt Agatha was right when she called you a
spineless invertebrate and advised me strongly not to marry you. It will
be perfectly simple for you to intercept the manuscript, Bertie. It only
requires a little resolution."</p>
<p>"But suppose Uncle Willoughby catches me at it? He'd cut me off with a
bob."</p>
<p>"If you care more for your uncle's money than for me——"</p>
<p>"No, no! Rather not!"</p>
<p>"Very well, then. The parcel containing the manuscript will, of course, be
placed on the hall table to-morrow for Oakshott to take to the village
with the letters. All you have to do is to take it away and destroy it.
Then your uncle will think it has been lost in the post."</p>
<p>It sounded thin to me.</p>
<p>"Hasn't he got a copy of it?"</p>
<p>"No; it has not been typed. He is sending the manuscript just as he wrote
it."</p>
<p>"But he could write it over again."</p>
<p>"As if he would have the energy!"</p>
<p>"But——"</p>
<p>"If you are going to do nothing but make absurd objections, Bertie——"</p>
<p>"I was only pointing things out."</p>
<p>"Well, don't! Once and for all, will you do me this quite simple act of
kindness?"</p>
<p>The way she put it gave me an idea.</p>
<p>"Why not get Edwin to do it? Keep it in the family, kind of, don't you
know. Besides, it would be a boon to the kid."</p>
<p>A jolly bright idea it seemed to me. Edwin was her young brother, who was
spending his holidays at Easeby. He was a ferret-faced kid, whom I had
disliked since birth. As a matter of fact, talking of Recollections and
Memories, it was young blighted Edwin who, nine years before, had led his
father to where I was smoking his cigar and caused all of the
unpleasantness. He was fourteen now and had just joined the Boy Scouts. He
was one of those thorough kids, and took his responsibilities pretty
seriously. He was always in a sort of fever because he was dropping behind
schedule with his daily acts of kindness. However hard he tried, he'd fall
behind; and then you would find him prowling about the house, setting such
a clip to try and catch up with himself that Easeby was rapidly becoming a
perfect hell for man and beast.</p>
<p>The idea didn't seem to strike Florence.</p>
<p>"I shall do nothing of the kind, Bertie. I wonder you can't appreciate the
compliment I am paying you—trusting you like this."</p>
<p>"Oh, I see that all right, but what I mean is, Edwin would do it so much
better than I would. These Boy Scouts are up to all sorts of dodges. They
spoor, don't you know, and take cover and creep about, and what not."</p>
<p>"Bertie, will you or will you not do this perfectly trivial thing for me?
If not, say so now, and let us end this farce of pretending that you care
a snap of the fingers for me."</p>
<p>"Dear old soul, I love you devotedly!"</p>
<p>"Then will you or will you not——"</p>
<p>"Oh, all right," I said. "All right! All right! All right!"</p>
<p>And then I tottered forth to think it over. I met Jeeves in the passage
just outside.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, sir. I was endeavouring to find you."</p>
<p>"What's the matter?"</p>
<p>"I felt that I should tell you, sir, that somebody has been putting black
polish on our brown walking shoes."</p>
<p>"What! Who? Why?"</p>
<p>"I could not say, sir."</p>
<p>"Can anything be done with them?"</p>
<p>"Nothing, sir."</p>
<p>"Damn!"</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<hr />
<p>I've often wondered since then how these murderer fellows manage to keep
in shape while they're contemplating their next effort. I had a much
simpler sort of job on hand, and the thought of it rattled me to such an
extent in the night watches that I was a perfect wreck next day. Dark
circles under the eyes—I give you my word! I had to call on Jeeves
to rally round with one of those life-savers of his.</p>
<p>From breakfast on I felt like a bag-snatcher at a railway station. I had
to hang about waiting for the parcel to be put on the hall table, and it
wasn't put. Uncle Willoughby was a fixture in the library, adding the
finishing touches to the great work, I supposed, and the more I thought
the thing over the less I liked it. The chances against my pulling it off
seemed about three to two, and the thought of what would happen if I
didn't gave me cold shivers down the spine. Uncle Willoughby was a pretty
mild sort of old boy, as a rule, but I've known him to cut up rough, and,
by Jove, he was scheduled to extend himself if he caught me trying to get
away with his life work.</p>
<p>It wasn't till nearly four that he toddled out of the library with the
parcel under his arm, put it on the table, and toddled off again. I was
hiding a bit to the south-east at the moment, behind a suit of armour. I
bounded out and legged it for the table. Then I nipped upstairs to hide
the swag. I charged in like a mustang and nearly stubbed my toe on young
blighted Edwin, the Boy Scout. He was standing at the chest of drawers,
confound him, messing about with my ties.</p>
<p>"Hallo!" he said.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here?"</p>
<p>"I'm tidying your room. It's my last Saturday's act of kindness."</p>
<p>"Last Saturday's?"</p>
<p>"I'm five days behind. I was six till last night, but I polished your
shoes."</p>
<p>"Was it you——"</p>
<p>"Yes. Did you see them? I just happened to think of it. I was in here,
looking round. Mr. Berkeley had this room while you were away. He left
this morning. I thought perhaps he might have left something in it that I
could have sent on. I've often done acts of kindness that way."</p>
<p>"You must be a comfort to one and all!"</p>
<p>It became more and more apparent to me that this infernal kid must somehow
be turned out eftsoons or right speedily. I had hidden the parcel behind
my back, and I didn't think he had seen it; but I wanted to get at that
chest of drawers quick, before anyone else came along.</p>
<p>"I shouldn't bother about tidying the room," I said.</p>
<p>"I like tidying it. It's not a bit of trouble—really."</p>
<p>"But it's quite tidy now."</p>
<p>"Not so tidy as I shall make it."</p>
<p>This was getting perfectly rotten. I didn't want to murder the kid, and
yet there didn't seem any other way of shifting him. I pressed down the
mental accelerator. The old lemon throbbed fiercely. I got an idea.</p>
<p>"There's something much kinder than that which you could do," I said. "You
see that box of cigars? Take it down to the smoking-room and snip off the
ends for me. That would save me no end of trouble. Stagger along, laddie."</p>
<p>He seemed a bit doubtful; but he staggered. I shoved the parcel into a
drawer, locked it, trousered the key, and felt better. I might be a chump,
but, dash it, I could out-general a mere kid with a face like a ferret. I
went downstairs again. Just as I was passing the smoking-room door, out
curveted Edwin. It seemed to me that if he wanted to do a real act of
kindness he would commit suicide.</p>
<p>"I'm snipping them," he said.</p>
<p>"Snip on! Snip on!"</p>
<p>"Do you like them snipped much, or only a bit?"</p>
<p>"Medium."</p>
<p>"All right. I'll be getting on, then."</p>
<p>"I should."</p>
<p>And we parted.</p>
<p>Fellows who know all about that sort of thing—detectives, and so on—will
tell you that the most difficult thing in the world is to get rid of the
body. I remember, as a kid, having to learn by heart a poem about a bird
by the name of Eugene Aram, who had the deuce of a job in this respect.
All I can recall of the actual poetry is the bit that goes:</p>
<p><i>Tum-tum, tum-tum, tum-tumty-tum,<br/>
I slew him, tum-tum-tum!</i><br/></p>
<p>But I recollect that the poor blighter spent much of his valuable time
dumping the corpse into ponds and burying it, and what not, only to have
it pop out at him again. It was about an hour after I had shoved the
parcel into the drawer when I realised that I had let myself in for just
the same sort of thing.</p>
<p>Florence had talked in an airy sort of way about destroying the
manuscript; but when one came down to it, how the deuce can a chap destroy
a great chunky mass of paper in somebody else's house in the middle of
summer? I couldn't ask to have a fire in my bedroom, with the thermometer
in the eighties. And if I didn't burn the thing, how else could I get rid
of it? Fellows on the battle-field eat dispatches to keep them from
falling into the hands of the enemy, but it would have taken me a year to
eat Uncle Willoughby's Recollections.</p>
<p>I'm bound to say the problem absolutely baffled me. The only thing seemed
to be to leave the parcel in the drawer and hope for the best.</p>
<p>I don't know whether you have ever experienced it, but it's a dashed
unpleasant thing having a crime on one's conscience. Towards the end of
the day the mere sight of the drawer began to depress me. I found myself
getting all on edge; and once when Uncle Willoughby trickled silently into
the smoking-room when I was alone there and spoke to me before I knew he
was there, I broke the record for the sitting high jump.</p>
<p>I was wondering all the time when Uncle Willoughby would sit up and take
notice. I didn't think he would have time to suspect that anything had
gone wrong till Saturday morning, when he would be expecting, of course,
to get the acknowledgment of the manuscript from the publishers. But early
on Friday evening he came out of the library as I was passing and asked me
to step in. He was looking considerably rattled.</p>
<p>"Bertie," he said—he always spoke in a precise sort of pompous kind
of way—"an exceedingly disturbing thing has happened. As you know, I
dispatched the manuscript of my book to Messrs. Riggs and Ballinger, the
publishers, yesterday afternoon. It should have reached them by the first
post this morning. Why I should have been uneasy I cannot say, but my mind
was not altogether at rest respecting the safety of the parcel. I
therefore telephoned to Messrs. Riggs and Ballinger a few moments back to
make enquiries. To my consternation they informed me that they were not
yet in receipt of my manuscript."</p>
<p>"Very rum!"</p>
<p>"I recollect distinctly placing it myself on the hall table in good time
to be taken to the village. But here is a sinister thing. I have spoken to
Oakshott, who took the rest of the letters to the post office, and he
cannot recall seeing it there. He is, indeed, unswerving in his assertions
that when he went to the hall to collect the letters there was no parcel
among them."</p>
<p>"Sounds funny!"</p>
<p>"Bertie, shall I tell you what I suspect?"</p>
<p>"What's that?"</p>
<p>"The suspicion will no doubt sound to you incredible, but it alone seems
to fit the facts as we know them. I incline to the belief that the parcel
has been stolen."</p>
<p>"Oh, I say! Surely not!"</p>
<p>"Wait! Hear me out. Though I have said nothing to you before, or to anyone
else, concerning the matter, the fact remains that during the past few
weeks a number of objects—some valuable, others not—have
disappeared in this house. The conclusion to which one is irresistibly
impelled is that we have a kleptomaniac in our midst. It is a peculiarity
of kleptomania, as you are no doubt aware, that the subject is unable to
differentiate between the intrinsic values of objects. He will purloin an
old coat as readily as a diamond ring, or a tobacco pipe costing but a few
shillings with the same eagerness as a purse of gold. The fact that this
manuscript of mine could be of no possible value to any outside person
convinces me that——"</p>
<p>"But, uncle, one moment; I know all about those things that were stolen.
It was Meadowes, my man, who pinched them. I caught him snaffling my silk
socks. Right in the act, by Jove!"</p>
<p>He was tremendously impressed.</p>
<p>"You amaze me, Bertie! Send for the man at once and question him."</p>
<p>"But he isn't here. You see, directly I found that he was a sock-sneaker I
gave him the boot. That's why I went to London—to get a new man."</p>
<p>"Then, if the man Meadowes is no longer in the house it could not be he
who purloined my manuscript. The whole thing is inexplicable."</p>
<p>After which we brooded for a bit. Uncle Willoughby pottered about the
room, registering baffledness, while I sat sucking at a cigarette, feeling
rather like a chappie I'd once read about in a book, who murdered another
cove and hid the body under the dining-room table, and then had to be the
life and soul of a dinner party, with it there all the time. My guilty
secret oppressed me to such an extent that after a while I couldn't stick
it any longer. I lit another cigarette and started for a stroll in the
grounds, by way of cooling off.</p>
<p>It was one of those still evenings you get in the summer, when you can
hear a snail clear its throat a mile away. The sun was sinking over the
hills and the gnats were fooling about all over the place, and everything
smelled rather topping—what with the falling dew and so on—and
I was just beginning to feel a little soothed by the peace of it all when
suddenly I heard my name spoken.</p>
<p>"It's about Bertie."</p>
<p>It was the loathsome voice of young blighted Edwin! For a moment I
couldn't locate it. Then I realised that it came from the library. My
stroll had taken me within a few yards of the open window.</p>
<p>I had often wondered how those Johnnies in books did it—I mean the
fellows with whom it was the work of a moment to do about a dozen things
that ought to have taken them about ten minutes. But, as a matter of fact,
it was the work of a moment with me to chuck away my cigarette, swear a
bit, leap about ten yards, dive into a bush that stood near the library
window, and stand there with my ears flapping. I was as certain as I've
ever been of anything that all sorts of rotten things were in the offing.</p>
<p>"About Bertie?" I heard Uncle Willoughby say.</p>
<p>"About Bertie and your parcel. I heard you talking to him just now. I
believe he's got it."</p>
<p>When I tell you that just as I heard these frightful words a fairly
substantial beetle of sorts dropped from the bush down the back of my
neck, and I couldn't even stir to squash the same, you will understand
that I felt pretty rotten. Everything seemed against me.</p>
<p>"What do you mean, boy? I was discussing the disappearance of my
manuscript with Bertie only a moment back, and he professed himself as
perplexed by the mystery as myself."</p>
<p>"Well, I was in his room yesterday afternoon, doing him an act of
kindness, and he came in with a parcel. I could see it, though he tried to
keep it behind his back. And then he asked me to go to the smoking-room
and snip some cigars for him; and about two minutes afterwards he came
down—and he wasn't carrying anything. So it must be in his room."</p>
<p>I understand they deliberately teach these dashed Boy Scouts to cultivate
their powers of observation and deduction and what not. Devilish
thoughtless and inconsiderate of them, I call it. Look at the trouble it
causes.</p>
<p>"It sounds incredible," said Uncle Willoughby, thereby bucking me up a
trifle.</p>
<p>"Shall I go and look in his room?" asked young blighted Edwin. "I'm sure
the parcel's there."</p>
<p>"But what could be his motive for perpetrating this extraordinary theft?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps he's a—what you said just now."</p>
<p>"A kleptomaniac? Impossible!"</p>
<p>"It might have been Bertie who took all those things from the very start,"
suggested the little brute hopefully. "He may be like Raffles."</p>
<p>"Raffles?"</p>
<p>"He's a chap in a book who went about pinching things."</p>
<p>"I cannot believe that Bertie would—ah—go about pinching
things."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm sure he's got the parcel. I'll tell you what you might do. You
might say that Mr. Berkeley wired that he had left something here. He had
Bertie's room, you know. You might say you wanted to look for it."</p>
<p>"That would be possible. I——"</p>
<p>I didn't wait to hear any more. Things were getting too hot. I sneaked
softly out of my bush and raced for the front door. I sprinted up to my
room and made for the drawer where I had put the parcel. And then I found
I hadn't the key. It wasn't for the deuce of a time that I recollected I
had shifted it to my evening trousers the night before and must have
forgotten to take it out again.</p>
<p>Where the dickens were my evening things? I had looked all over the place
before I remembered that Jeeves must have taken them away to brush. To
leap at the bell and ring it was, with me, the work of a moment. I had
just rung it when there was a footstep outside, and in came Uncle
Willoughby.</p>
<p>"Oh, Bertie," he said, without a blush, "I have—ah—received a
telegram from Berkeley, who occupied this room in your absence, asking me
to forward him his—er—his cigarette-case, which, it would
appear, he inadvertently omitted to take with him when he left the house.
I cannot find it downstairs; and it has, therefore, occurred to me that he
may have left it in this room. I will—er—just take a look
around."</p>
<p>It was one of the most disgusting spectacles I've ever seen—this
white-haired old man, who should have been thinking of the hereafter,
standing there lying like an actor.</p>
<p>"I haven't seen it anywhere," I said.</p>
<p>"Nevertheless, I will search. I must—ah—spare no effort."</p>
<p>"I should have seen it if it had been here—what?"</p>
<p>"It may have escaped your notice. It is—er—possibly in one of
the drawers."</p>
<p>He began to nose about. He pulled out drawer after drawer, pottering
around like an old bloodhound, and babbling from time to time about
Berkeley and his cigarette-case in a way that struck me as perfectly
ghastly. I just stood there, losing weight every moment.</p>
<p>Then he came to the drawer where the parcel was.</p>
<p>"This appears to be locked," he said, rattling the handle.</p>
<p>"Yes; I shouldn't bother about that one. It—it's—er—locked,
and all that sort of thing."</p>
<p>"You have not the key?"</p>
<p>A soft, respectful voice spoke behind me.</p>
<p>"I fancy, sir, that this must be the key you require. It was in the pocket
of your evening trousers."</p>
<p>It was Jeeves. He had shimmered in, carrying my evening things, and was
standing there holding out the key. I could have massacred the man.</p>
<p>"Thank you," said my uncle.</p>
<p>"Not at all, sir."</p>
<p>The next moment Uncle Willoughby had opened the drawer. I shut my eyes.</p>
<p>"No," said Uncle Willoughby, "there is nothing here. The drawer is empty.
Thank you, Bertie. I hope I have not disturbed you. I fancy—er—Berkeley
must have taken his case with him after all."</p>
<p>When he had gone I shut the door carefully. Then I turned to Jeeves. The
man was putting my evening things out on a chair.</p>
<p>"Er—Jeeves!"</p>
<p>"Sir?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing."</p>
<p>It was deuced difficult to know how to begin.</p>
<p>"Er—Jeeves!"</p>
<p>"Sir?"</p>
<p>"Did you—Was there—Have you by chance——"</p>
<p>"I removed the parcel this morning, sir."</p>
<p>"Oh—ah—why?"</p>
<p>"I considered it more prudent, sir."</p>
<p>I mused for a while.</p>
<p>"Of course, I suppose all this seems tolerably rummy to you, Jeeves?"</p>
<p>"Not at all, sir. I chanced to overhear you and Lady Florence speaking of
the matter the other evening, sir."</p>
<p>"Did you, by Jove?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Well—er—Jeeves, I think that, on the whole, if you were to—as
it were—freeze on to that parcel until we get back to London——"</p>
<p>"Exactly, sir."</p>
<p>"And then we might—er—so to speak—chuck it away
somewhere—what?"</p>
<p>"Precisely, sir."</p>
<p>"I'll leave it in your hands."</p>
<p>"Entirely, sir."</p>
<p>"You know, Jeeves, you're by way of being rather a topper."</p>
<p>"I endeavour to give satisfaction, sir."</p>
<p>"One in a million, by Jove!"</p>
<p>"It is very kind of you to say so, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, that's about all, then, I think."</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<p>Florence came back on Monday. I didn't see her till we were all having tea
in the hall. It wasn't till the crowd had cleared away a bit that we got a
chance of having a word together.</p>
<p>"Well, Bertie?" she said.</p>
<p>"It's all right."</p>
<p>"You have destroyed the manuscript?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly; but——"</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"I mean I haven't absolutely——"</p>
<p>"Bertie, your manner is furtive!"</p>
<p>"It's all right. It's this way——"</p>
<p>And I was just going to explain how things stood when out of the library
came leaping Uncle Willoughby looking as braced as a two-year-old. The old
boy was a changed man.</p>
<p>"A most remarkable thing, Bertie! I have just been speaking with Mr. Riggs
on the telephone, and he tells me he received my manuscript by the first
post this morning. I cannot imagine what can have caused the delay. Our
postal facilities are extremely inadequate in the rural districts. I shall
write to headquarters about it. It is insufferable if valuable parcels are
to be delayed in this fashion."</p>
<p>I happened to be looking at Florence's profile at the moment, and at this
juncture she swung round and gave me a look that went right through me
like a knife. Uncle Willoughby meandered back to the library, and there
was a silence that you could have dug bits out of with a spoon.</p>
<p>"I can't understand it," I said at last. "I can't understand it, by Jove!"</p>
<p>"I can. I can understand it perfectly, Bertie. Your heart failed you.
Rather than risk offending your uncle you——"</p>
<p>"No, no! Absolutely!"</p>
<p>"You preferred to lose me rather than risk losing the money. Perhaps you
did not think I meant what I said. I meant every word. Our engagement is
ended."</p>
<p>"But—I say!"</p>
<p>"Not another word!"</p>
<p>"But, Florence, old thing!"</p>
<p>"I do not wish to hear any more. I see now that your Aunt Agatha was
perfectly right. I consider that I have had a very lucky escape. There was
a time when I thought that, with patience, you might be moulded into
something worth while. I see now that you are impossible!"</p>
<p>And she popped off, leaving me to pick up the pieces. When I had collected
the debris to some extent I went to my room and rang for Jeeves. He came
in looking as if nothing had happened or was ever going to happen. He was
the calmest thing in captivity.</p>
<p>"Jeeves!" I yelled. "Jeeves, that parcel has arrived in London!"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir?"</p>
<p>"Did you send it?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. I acted for the best, sir. I think that both you and Lady
Florence overestimated the danger of people being offended at being
mentioned in Sir Willoughby's Recollections. It has been my experience,
sir, that the normal person enjoys seeing his or her name in print,
irrespective of what is said about them. I have an aunt, sir, who a few
years ago was a martyr to swollen limbs. She tried Walkinshaw's Supreme
Ointment and obtained considerable relief—so much so that she sent
them an unsolicited testimonial. Her pride at seeing her photograph in the
daily papers in connection with descriptions of her lower limbs before
taking, which were nothing less than revolting, was so intense that it led
me to believe that publicity, of whatever sort, is what nearly everybody
desires. Moreover, if you have ever studied psychology, sir, you will know
that respectable old gentlemen are by no means averse to having it
advertised that they were extremely wild in their youth. I have an uncle——"</p>
<p>I cursed his aunts and his uncles and him and all the rest of the family.</p>
<p>"Do you know that Lady Florence has broken off her engagement with me?"</p>
<p>"Indeed, sir?"</p>
<p>Not a bit of sympathy! I might have been telling him it was a fine day.</p>
<p>"You're sacked!"</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<p>He coughed gently.</p>
<p>"As I am no longer in your employment, sir, I can speak freely without
appearing to take a liberty. In my opinion you and Lady Florence were
quite unsuitably matched. Her ladyship is of a highly determined and
arbitrary temperament, quite opposed to your own. I was in Lord
Worplesdon's service for nearly a year, during which time I had ample
opportunities of studying her ladyship. The opinion of the servants' hall
was far from favourable to her. Her ladyship's temper caused a good deal
of adverse comment among us. It was at times quite impossible. You would
not have been happy, sir!"</p>
<p>"Get out!"</p>
<p>"I think you would also have found her educational methods a little
trying, sir. I have glanced at the book her ladyship gave you—it has
been lying on your table since our arrival—and it is, in my opinion,
quite unsuitable. You would not have enjoyed it. And I have it from her
ladyship's own maid, who happened to overhear a conversation between her
ladyship and one of the gentlemen staying here—Mr. Maxwell, who is
employed in an editorial capacity by one of the reviews—that it was
her intention to start you almost immediately upon Nietzsche. You would
not enjoy Nietzsche, sir. He is fundamentally unsound."</p>
<p>"Get out!"</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<hr />
<p>It's rummy how sleeping on a thing often makes you feel quite different
about it. It's happened to me over and over again. Somehow or other, when
I woke next morning the old heart didn't feel half so broken as it had
done. It was a perfectly topping day, and there was something about the
way the sun came in at the window and the row the birds were kicking up in
the ivy that made me half wonder whether Jeeves wasn't right. After all,
though she had a wonderful profile, was it such a catch being engaged to
Florence Craye as the casual observer might imagine? Wasn't there
something in what Jeeves had said about her character? I began to realise
that my ideal wife was something quite different, something a lot more
clinging and drooping and prattling, and what not.</p>
<p>I had got as far as this in thinking the thing out when that "Types of
Ethical Theory" caught my eye. I opened it, and I give you my honest word
this was what hit me:</p>
<p><i>Of the two antithetic terms in the Greek philosophy one only<br/>
was real and self-subsisting; and that one was Ideal Thought as<br/>
opposed to that which it has to penetrate and mould. The other,<br/>
corresponding to our Nature, was in itself phenomenal, unreal,<br/>
without any permanent footing, having no predicates that held<br/>
true for two moments together, in short, redeemed from negation<br/>
only by including indwelling realities appearing through</i>.<br/></p>
<p>Well—I mean to say—what? And Nietzsche, from all accounts, a
lot worse than that!</p>
<p>"Jeeves," I said, when he came in with my morning tea, "I've been thinking
it over. You're engaged again."</p>
<p>"Thank you, sir."</p>
<p>I sucked down a cheerful mouthful. A great respect for this bloke's
judgment began to soak through me.</p>
<p>"Oh, Jeeves," I said; "about that check suit."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir?"</p>
<p>"Is it really a frost?"</p>
<p>"A trifle too bizarre, sir, in my opinion."</p>
<p>"But lots of fellows have asked me who my tailor is."</p>
<p>"Doubtless in order to avoid him, sir."</p>
<p>"He's supposed to be one of the best men in London."</p>
<p>"I am saying nothing against his moral character, sir."</p>
<p>I hesitated a bit. I had a feeling that I was passing into this chappie's
clutches, and that if I gave in now I should become just like poor old
Aubrey Fothergill, unable to call my soul my own. On the other hand, this
was obviously a cove of rare intelligence, and it would be a comfort in a
lot of ways to have him doing the thinking for me. I made up my mind.</p>
<p>"All right, Jeeves," I said. "You know! Give the bally thing away to
somebody!"</p>
<p>He looked down at me like a father gazing tenderly at the wayward child.</p>
<p>"Thank you, sir. I gave it to the under-gardener last night. A little more
tea, sir?"</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DISENTANGLING OLD DUGGIE </h2>
<p>Doesn't some poet or philosopher fellow say that it's when our intentions
are best that we always make the worst breaks? I can't put my hand on the
passage, but you'll find it in Shakespeare or somewhere, I'm pretty
certain.</p>
<p>At any rate, it's always that way with me. And the affair of Douglas Craye
is a case in point.</p>
<p>I had dined with Duggie (a dear old pal of mine) one night at his club,
and as he was seeing me out he said: "Reggie, old top"—my name's
Reggie Pepper—"Reggie, old top, I'm rather worried."</p>
<p>"Are you, Duggie, old pal?" I said.</p>
<p>"Yes, Reggie, old fellow," he said, "I am. It's like this. The Booles have
asked me down to their place for the week-end, and I don't know whether to
go or not. You see, they have early breakfast, and besides that there's a
frightful risk of music after dinner. On the other hand, young Roderick
Boole thinks he can play piquet."</p>
<p>"I should go," I said.</p>
<p>"But I'm not sure Roderick's going to be there this time."</p>
<p>It was a problem, and I didn't wonder poor old Dug had looked pale and
tired at dinner.</p>
<p>Then I had the idea which really started all the trouble.</p>
<p>"Why don't you consult a palmist?" I said.</p>
<p>"That sounds a good idea," said Duggie.</p>
<p>"Go and see Dorothea in Forty-second Street. She's a wonder. She'll settle
it for you in a second. She'll see from your lines that you are thinking
of making a journey, and she'll either tell you to get a move on, which
will mean that Roderick will be there, or else to keep away because she
sees disaster."</p>
<p>"You seem to be next to the game all right."</p>
<p>"I've been to a good many of them. You'll like Dorothea."</p>
<p>"What did you say her name was—Dorothea? What do I do? Do I just
walk in? Shan't I feel a fearful chump? How much do I give her?"</p>
<p>"Five bucks. You'd better write and make a date."</p>
<p>"All right," said Duggie. "But I know I shall look a frightful fool."</p>
<p>About a week later I ran into him between the acts at the Knickerbocker.
The old boy was beaming.</p>
<p>"Reggie," he said, "you did me the best turn anyone's ever done me,
sending me to Mrs. Darrell."</p>
<p>"Mrs. Darrell?"</p>
<p>"You know. Dorothea. Her real name's Darrell. She's a widow. Her husband
was in some regiment, and left her without a penny. It's a frightfully
pathetic story. Haven't time to tell you now. My boy, she's a marvel. She
had hardly looked at my hand, when she said: 'You will prosper in any
venture you undertake.' And next day, by George, I went down to the
Booles' and separated young Roderick from seventy dollars. She's a
wonderful woman. Did you ever see just that shade of hair?"</p>
<p>"I didn't notice her hair."</p>
<p>He gaped at me in a sort of petrified astonishment.</p>
<p>"You—didn't—notice—her—hair!" he gasped.</p>
<p>I can't fix the dates exactly, but it must have been about three weeks
after this that I got a telegram:</p>
<p>"Call Madison Avenue immediately—Florence Craye."<br/></p>
<p>She needn't have signed her name. I should have known who it was from by
the wording. Ever since I was a kid, Duggie's sister Florence has
oppressed me to the most fearful extent. Not that I'm the only one. Her
brothers live in terror of her, I know. Especially Edwin. He's never been
able to get away from her and it's absolutely broken his spirit. He's a
mild, hopeless sort of chump who spends all his time at home—they
live near Philadelphia—and has never been known to come to New York.
He's writing a history of the family, or something, I believe.</p>
<p>You see, events have conspired, so to speak, to let Florence do pretty
much as she likes with them. Originally there was old man Craye, Duggie's
father, who made a fortune out of the Soup Trust; Duggie's elder brother
Edwin; Florence; and Duggie. Mrs. Craye has been dead some years. Then
came the smash. It happened through the old man. Most people, if you ask
them, will tell you that he ought to be in Bloomingdale; and I'm not sure
they're not right. At any rate, one morning he came down to breakfast,
lifted the first cover on the sideboard, said in a sort of despairing way,
"Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Curse all eggs!" and walked out of the room. Nobody
thought much of it till about an hour afterward, when they found that he
had packed a grip, left the house, and caught the train to New York. Next
day they got a letter from him, saying that he was off to Europe, never to
return, and that all communications were to be addressed to his lawyers.
And from that day on none of them had seen him. He wrote occasionally,
generally from Paris; and that was all.</p>
<p>Well, directly news of this got about, down swooped a series of aunts to
grab the helm. They didn't stay long. Florence had them out, one after the
other, in no time. If any lingering doubt remained in their minds, don't
you know, as to who was going to be boss at home, it wasn't her fault.
Since then she has run the show.</p>
<p>I went to Madison Avenue. It was one of the aunts' houses. There was no
sign of the aunt when I called—she had probably climbed a tree and
pulled it up after her—but Florence was there.</p>
<p>She is a tall woman with what, I believe, is called "a presence." Her eyes
are bright and black, and have a way of getting right inside you, don't
you know, and running up and down your spine. She has a deep voice. She is
about ten years older than Duggie's brother Edwin, who is six years older
than Duggie.</p>
<p>"Good afternoon," she said. "Sit down."</p>
<p>I poured myself into a chair.</p>
<p>"Reginald," she said, "what is this I hear about Douglas?"</p>
<p>I said I didn't know.</p>
<p>"He says that you introduced him."</p>
<p>"Eh?"</p>
<p>"To this woman—this Mrs. Darrell."</p>
<p>"Mrs. Darrell?"</p>
<p>My memory's pretty rocky, and the name conveyed nothing to me.</p>
<p>She pulled out a letter.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said, "Mrs. Dorothy Darrell."</p>
<p>"Great Scott! Dorothea!"</p>
<p>Her eyes resumed their spine drill.</p>
<p>"Who is she?"</p>
<p>"Only a palmist."</p>
<p>"Only a palmist!" Her voice absolutely boomed. "Well, my brother Douglas
is engaged to be married to her."</p>
<p>"Many happy returns of the day," I said.</p>
<p>I don't know why I said it. It wasn't what I meant to say. I'm not sure I
meant to say anything.</p>
<p>She glared at me. By this time I was pure jelly. I simply flowed about the
chair.</p>
<p>"You are facetious, Reginald," she said.</p>
<p>"No, no, no," I shouted. "It slipped out. I wouldn't be facetious for
worlds."</p>
<p>"I am glad. It is no laughing matter. Have you any suggestions?"</p>
<p>"Suggestions?"</p>
<p>"You don't imagine it can be allowed to go on? The engagement must be
broken, of course. But how?"</p>
<p>"Why don't you tell him he mustn't?"</p>
<p>"I shall naturally express my strong disapproval, but it may not be
effective. When out of the reach of my personal influence, my wretched
brother is self-willed to a degree."</p>
<p>I saw what she meant. Good old Duggie wasn't going to have those eyes
patrolling his spine if he knew it. He meant to keep away and conduct this
business by letter. There was going to be no personal interview with
sister, if he had to dodge about America like a snipe.</p>
<p>We sat for a long time without speaking. Then I became rather subtle. I
had a brain-wave and saw my way to making things right for Dug and at the
same time squaring myself with Florence. After all, I thought, the old boy
couldn't keep away from home for the rest of his life. He would have to go
there sooner or later. And my scheme made it pleasant and easy for him.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you what I should do if I were you," I said. "I'm not sure I
didn't read some book or see some play somewhere or other where they tried
it on, and it worked all right. Fellow got engaged to a girl, and the
family didn't like it, but, instead of kicking, they pretended to be
tickled to pieces, and had the fellow and the girl down to visit them. And
then, after the fellow had seen the girl with the home circle as a
background, don't you know, he came to the conclusion that it wouldn't do,
and broke off the engagement."</p>
<p>It seemed to strike her.</p>
<p>"I hardly expected so sensible a suggestion from you, Reginald," she said.
"It is a very good plan. It shows that you really have a definite
substratum of intelligence; and it is all the more deplorable that you
should idle your way through the world as you do, when you might be
performing some really useful work."</p>
<p>That was Florence all over. Even when she patted you on the head, she had
to do it with her knuckles.</p>
<p>"I will invite them down next week," she went on. "You had better come,
too."</p>
<p>"It's awfully kind of you, but the fact is——"</p>
<p>"Next Wednesday. Take the three-forty-seven."</p>
<p>I met Duggie next day. He was looking happy, but puzzled, like a man who
has found a dime on the street and is wondering if there's a string tied
to it. I congratulated him on his engagement.</p>
<p>"Reggie," he said, "a queer thing has happened. I feel as if I'd trodden
on the last step when it wasn't there. I've just had a letter from my
sister Florence asking me to bring Dorothy home on Wednesday. Florence
doesn't seem to object to the idea of the engagement at all; and I'd
expected that I'd have to call out the police reserves when she heard of
it. I believe there's a catch somewhere."</p>
<p>I tapped him on the breastbone.</p>
<p>"There is, Dug," I said, "and I'll tell you what it is. I saw her
yesterday, and I can put you next to the game. She thinks that if you see
Mrs. Darrell mingling with the home circle, you'll see flaws in her which
you don't see when you don't see her mingling with the home circle, don't
you see? Do you see now?"</p>
<p>He laughed—heroically, don't you know.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid she'll be disappointed. Love like mine is not dependent on
environment."</p>
<p>Which wasn't bad, I thought, if it was his own.</p>
<p>I said good-by to him, and toddled along rather pleased with myself. It
seemed to me that I had handled his affairs in a pretty masterly manner
for a chap who's supposed to be one of the biggest chumps in New York.</p>
<p>Well, of course, the thing was an absolute fliver, as I ought to have
guessed it would be. Whatever could have induced me to think that a fellow
like poor old Dug stood a dog's chance against a determined female like
his sister Florence, I can't imagine. It was like expecting a rabbit to
put up a show with a python. From the very start there was only one
possible end to the thing. To a woman like Florence, who had trained
herself as tough as whalebone by years of scrapping with her father and
occasional by-battles with aunts, it was as easy as killing rats with a
stick.</p>
<p>I was sorry for Mrs. Darrell. She was a really good sort and, as a matter
of fact, just the kind of wife who would have done old Duggie a bit of
good. And on her own ground I shouldn't wonder if she might not have made
a fight for it. But now she hadn't a chance. Poor old Duggie was just like
so much putty in Florence's hands when he couldn't get away from her. You
could see the sawdust trickling out of Love's Young Dream in a steady
flow.</p>
<p>I took Mrs. Darrell for a walk one afternoon, to see if I couldn't cheer
her up a bit, but it wasn't much good. She hardly spoke a word till we
were on our way home. Then she said with a sort of jerk: "I'm going back
to New York tomorrow, Mr. Pepper."</p>
<p>I suppose I ought to have pretended to be surprised, but I couldn't work
it.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid you've had a bad time," I said. "I'm very sorry."</p>
<p>She laughed.</p>
<p>"Thank you," she said. "It's nice of you to be sympathetic instead of
tactful. You're rather a dear, Mr. Pepper."</p>
<p>I hadn't any remarks to make. I whacked at a nettle with my stick.</p>
<p>"I shall break off my engagement after dinner, so that Douglas can have a
good night's rest. I'm afraid he has been brooding on the future a good
deal. It will be a great relief to him."</p>
<p>"Oh, no," I said.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. I know exactly how he feels. He thought he could carry me off,
but he finds he overestimated his powers. He has remembered that he is a
Craye. I imagine that the fact has been pointed out to him."</p>
<p>"If you ask my opinion," I said—I was feeling pretty sore about it—"that
woman Florence is an absolute cat."</p>
<p>"My dear Mr. Pepper, I wouldn't have dreamed of asking your opinion on
such a delicate subject. But I'm glad to have it. Thank you very much. Do
I strike you as a vindictive woman, Mr. Pepper?"</p>
<p>"I don't think you do," I said.</p>
<p>"By nature I don't think I am. But I'm feeling a little vindictive just at
present."</p>
<p>She stopped suddenly.</p>
<p>"I don't know why I'm boring you like this, Mr. Pepper," she said. "For
goodness' sake let's be cheerful. Say something bright."</p>
<p>I was going to take a whirl at it, but she started in to talk, and talked
all the rest of the way. She seemed to have cheered up a whole lot.</p>
<p>She left next day. I gather she fired Duggie as per schedule, for the old
boy looked distinctly brighter, and Florence wore an off-duty expression
and was quite decently civil. Mrs. Darrell bore up all right. She avoided
Duggie, of course, and put in most of the time talking to Edwin. He
evidently appreciated it, for I had never seen him look so nearly happy
before.</p>
<p>I went back to New York directly afterward, and I hadn't been there much
more than a week when a most remarkably queer thing happened. Turning in
at Hammerstein's for half an hour one evening, whom should I meet but
brother Edwin, quite fairly festive, with a fat cigar in his mouth.
"Hello, Reggie," he said.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here?" I said.</p>
<p>"I had to come up to New York to look up a life of Hilary de Craye at the
library. I believe Mister Man was a sort of ancestor."</p>
<p>"This isn't the library."</p>
<p>"I was beginning to guess as much. The difference is subtle but well
marked."</p>
<p>It struck me that there was another difference that was subtle but well
marked, and that was the difference between the Edwin I'd left messing
about over his family history a week before and the jovial rounder who was
blowing smoke in my face now.</p>
<p>"As a matter of fact," he said, "the library would be all the better for a
little of this sort of thing. It's too conservative. That's what's the
trouble with the library. What's the matter with having a cross-talk team
and a few performing dogs there? It would brighten the place up and
attract custom. Reggie, you're looking fatigued. I've heard there's a
place somewhere in this city, if you can only find it, expressly designed
for supplying first-aid to the fatigued. Let's go and look for it."</p>
<p>I'm not given to thinking much as a rule, but I couldn't help pondering
over this meeting with Edwin. It's hard to make you see the remarkableness
of the whole thing, for, of course, if you look at it, in one way, there's
nothing so record-breaking in smoking a cigar and drinking a highball. But
then you have never seen Edwin. There are degrees in everything, don't you
know. For Edwin to behave as he did with me that night was simply nothing
more nor less than a frightful outburst, and it disturbed me. Not that I
cared what Edwin did, as a rule, but I couldn't help feeling a sort of
what-d'you-call-it—a presentiment, that somehow, in some way I
didn't understand, I was mixed up in it, or was soon going to be. I think
the whole fearful family had got on my nerves to such an extent that the
mere sight of any of them made me jumpy.</p>
<p>And, by George, I was perfectly right, don't you know. In a day or two
along came the usual telegram from Florence, telling me to come to Madison
Avenue.</p>
<p>The mere idea of Madison Avenue was beginning to give me that tired
feeling, and I made up my mind I wouldn't go near the place. But of course
I did. When it came to the point, I simply hadn't the common manly courage
to keep away.</p>
<p>Florence was there as before.</p>
<p>"Reginald," she said, "I think I shall go raving mad."</p>
<p>This struck me as a mighty happy solution of everybody's troubles, but I
felt it was too good to be true.</p>
<p>"Over a week ago," she went on, "my brother Edwin came up to New York to
consult a book at the library. I anticipated that this would occupy
perhaps an afternoon, and was expecting him back by an early train next
day. He did not arrive. He sent an incoherent telegram. But even then I
suspected nothing." She paused. "Yesterday morning," she said, "I had a
letter from my aunt Augusta."</p>
<p>She paused again. She seemed to think I ought to be impressed.</p>
<p>Her eyes tied a bowknot in my spine.</p>
<p>"Let me read you her letter. No, I will tell you its contents. Aunt
Augusta had seen Edwin lunching at the Waldorf with a creature."</p>
<p>"A what?"</p>
<p>"My aunt described her. Her hair was of a curious dull bronze tint."</p>
<p>"Your aunt's?"</p>
<p>"The woman's. It was then that I began to suspect. How many women with
dull bronze hair does Edwin know?"</p>
<p>"Great Scott! Why ask me?"</p>
<p>I had got used to being treated as a sort of "Hey, Bill!" by Florence, but
I was darned if I was going to be expected to be an encyclopedia as well.</p>
<p>"One," she said. "That appalling Darrell woman."</p>
<p>She drew a deep breath.</p>
<p>"Yesterday evening," she said, "I saw them together in a taximeter cab.
They were obviously on their way to some theatre."</p>
<p>She fixed me with her eye.</p>
<p>"Reginald," she said, "you must go and see her the first thing to-morrow."</p>
<p>"What!" I cried. "Me? Why? Why me?"</p>
<p>"Because you are responsible for the whole affair. You introduced Douglas
to her. You suggested that he should bring her home. Go to her to-morrow
and ascertain her intentions."</p>
<p>"But——"</p>
<p>"The very first thing."</p>
<p>"But wouldn't it be better to have a talk with Edwin?"</p>
<p>"I have made every endeavour to see Edwin, but he deliberately avoids me.
His answers to my telegrams are willfully evasive."</p>
<p>There was no doubt that Edwin had effected a thorough bolt. He was having
quite a pleasant little vacation: Two Weeks in Sunny New York. And from
what I'd seen of him, he seemed to be thriving on it. I didn't wonder
Florence had got rather anxious. She'd have been more anxious if she had
seen him when I did. He'd got a sort of "New-York-is-so-bracing" look
about him, which meant a whole heap of trouble before he trotted back to
the fold.</p>
<p>Well, I started off to interview Mrs. Darrell, and, believe me, I didn't
like the prospect. I think they ought to train A. D. T. messengers to do
this sort of thing. I found her alone. The rush hour of clients hadn't
begun.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Mr. Pepper?" she said. "How nice of you to call."</p>
<p>Very friendly, and all that. It made the situation darned difficult for a
fellow, if you see what I mean.</p>
<p>"Say," I said. "What about it, don't you know?"</p>
<p>"I certainly don't," she said. "What ought I to know about what?"</p>
<p>"Well, about Edwin—Edwin Craye," I said.</p>
<p>She smiled.</p>
<p>"Oh! So you're an ambassador, Mr. Pepper?"</p>
<p>"Well, as a matter of fact, I did come to see if I could find out how
things were running. What's going to happen?"</p>
<p>"Are you consulting me professionally? If so, you must show me your hand.
Or perhaps you would rather I showed you mine?"</p>
<p>It was subtle, but I got on to it after a bit.</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, "I wish you would."</p>
<p>"Very well. Do you remember a conversation we had, Mr. Pepper, my last
afternoon at the Crayes'? We came to the conclusion that I was rather a
vindictive woman."</p>
<p>"By George! You're stringing old Edwin so as to put one over on Florence?"</p>
<p>She flushed a little.</p>
<p>"How very direct you are, Mr. Pepper! How do you know I'm not very fond of
Mr. Craye? At any rate, I'm very sorry for him."</p>
<p>"He's such a chump."</p>
<p>"But he's improving every day. Have you seen him? You must notice the
difference?"</p>
<p>"There is a difference."</p>
<p>"He only wanted taking out of himself. I think he found his sister
Florence's influence a little oppressive sometimes."</p>
<p>"No, but see here," I said, "are you going to marry him?"</p>
<p>"I'm only a palmist. I don't pretend to be a clairvoyant. A marriage may
be indicated in Mr. Craye's hand, but I couldn't say without looking at
it."</p>
<p>"But I shall have to tell her something definite, or she won't give me a
moment's peace."</p>
<p>"Tell her her brother is of age. Surely that's definite enough?"</p>
<p>And I couldn't get any more out of her. I went back to Florence and
reported. She got pretty excited about it.</p>
<p>"Oh, if I were a man!" she said.</p>
<p>I didn't see how that would have helped. I said so.</p>
<p>"I'd go straight to Edwin and <i>drag</i> him away. He is staying at his
club. If I were a man I could go in and find him——"</p>
<p>"Not if you weren't a member," I said.</p>
<p>"—And tell him what I thought of his conduct. As I'm only a woman, I
have to wait in the hall while a deceitful small boy pretends to go and
look for him."</p>
<p>It had never struck me before what a splendid institution a club was. Only
a few days back I'd been thinking that the subscription to mine was a bit
steep. But now I saw that the place earned every cent of the money.</p>
<p>"Have you no influence with him, Reginald?"</p>
<p>I said I didn't think I had. She called me something. Invertebrate, or
something. I didn't catch it.</p>
<p>"Then there's only one thing to do. You must find my father and tell him
all. Perhaps you may rouse him to a sense of what is right. You may make
him remember that he has duties as a parent."</p>
<p>I thought it far more likely that I should make him remember that he had a
foot. I hadn't a very vivid recollection of old man Craye. I was quite a
kid when he made his great speech on the Egg Question and beat it for
Europe—but what I did recollect didn't encourage me to go and chat
with him about the duties of a parent.</p>
<p>As I remember him, he was a rather large man with elephantiasis of the
temper. I distinctly recalled one occasion when I was spending a school
vacation at his home, and he found me trying to shave old Duggie, then a
kid of fourteen, with his razor.</p>
<p>"I shouldn't be able to find him," I said.</p>
<p>"You can get his address from his lawyers."</p>
<p>"He may be at the North Pole."</p>
<p>"Then you must go to the North Pole."</p>
<p>"But say——!"</p>
<p>"Reginald!"</p>
<p>"Oh, all right."</p>
<p>I knew just what would happen. Parbury and Stevens, the lawyers, simply
looked at me as if I had been caught snatching bags. At least, Stevens
did. And Parbury would have done it, too, only he had been dead a good
time. Finally, after drinking me in for about a quarter of an hour,
Stevens said that if I desired to address a communication to his client,
care of this office, it would be duly forwarded. Good morning. Good
morning. Anything further? No, thanks. Good morning. Good morning.</p>
<p>I handed the glad news on to Florence and left her to do what she liked
about it. She went down and interviewed Stevens. I suppose he'd had
experience of her. At any rate, he didn't argue. He yielded up the address
in level time. Old man Craye was living in Paris, but was to arrive in New
York that night, and would doubtless be at his club.</p>
<p>It was the same club where Edwin was hiding from Florence. I pointed this
out to her.</p>
<p>"There's no need for me to butt in after all," I said. "He'll meet Edwin
there, and they can fight it out in the smoking room. You've only to drop
him a line explaining the facts."</p>
<p>"I shall certainly communicate with him in writing, but, nevertheless, you
must see him. I cannot explain everything in a letter."</p>
<p>"But doesn't it strike you that he may think it pretty bad gall—impertinence,
don't you know, for a comparative stranger like me to be tackling a
delicate family affair like this?"</p>
<p>"You will explain that you are acting for me."</p>
<p>"It wouldn't be better if old Duggie went along instead?"</p>
<p>"I wish you to go, Reginald."</p>
<p>Well, of course, it was all right, don't you know, but I was losing
several pounds a day over the business. I was getting so light that I felt
that, when the old man kicked me, I should just soar up to the ceiling
like an air balloon.</p>
<p>The club was one of those large clubs that look like prisons. I used to go
there to lunch with my uncle, the one who left me his money, and I always
hated the place. It was one of those clubs that are all red leather and
hushed whispers.</p>
<p>I'm bound to say, though, there wasn't much hushed whispering when I
started my interview with old man Craye. His voice was one of my
childhood's recollections.</p>
<p>He was most extraordinarily like Florence. He had just the same eyes. I
felt boneless from the start.</p>
<p>"Good morning," I said.</p>
<p>"What?" he said. "Speak up. Don't mumble."</p>
<p>I hadn't known he was deaf. The last time we'd had any conversation—on
the subject of razors—he had done all the talking. This seemed to me
to put the lid on it.</p>
<p>"I only said 'Good morning,'" I shouted.</p>
<p>"Good what? Speak up. I believe you're sucking candy. Oh, good morning? I
remember you now. You're the boy who spoiled my razor."</p>
<p>I didn't half like this reopening of old wounds. I hurried on.</p>
<p>"I came about Edwin," I said.</p>
<p>"Who?"</p>
<p>"Edwin. Your son."</p>
<p>"What about him?"</p>
<p>"Florence told me to see you."</p>
<p>"Who?"</p>
<p>"Florence. Your daughter."</p>
<p>"What about her?"</p>
<p>All this vaudeville team business, mind you, as if we were bellowing at
each other across the street. All round the room you could see old
gentlemen shooting out of their chairs like rockets and dashing off at a
gallop to write to the governing board about it. Thousands of waiters had
appeared from nowhere, and were hanging about, dusting table legs. If ever
a business wanted to be discussed privately, this seemed to me to be it.
And it was just about as private as a conversation through megaphones in
Longacre Square.</p>
<p>"Didn't she write to you?"</p>
<p>"I got a letter from her. I tore it up. I didn't read it."</p>
<p>Pleasant, was it not? It was not. I began to understand what a shipwrecked
sailor must feel when he finds there's something gone wrong with the life
belt.</p>
<p>I thought I might as well get to the point and get it over.</p>
<p>"Edwin's going to marry a palmist," I said.</p>
<p>"Who the devil's Harry?"</p>
<p>"Not Harry. Marry. He's going to marry a palmist."</p>
<p>About four hundred waiters noticed a speck of dust on an ash tray at the
table next to ours, and swooped down on it.</p>
<p>"Edwin is going to marry a palmist?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"She must be mad. Hasn't she seen Edwin?"</p>
<p>And just then who should stroll in but Edwin himself. I sighted him and
gave him a hail.</p>
<p>He curveted up to us. It was amazing the way the fellow had altered. He
looked like a two-year-old. Flower in his button-hole and a six-inch grin,
and all that. The old man seemed surprised, too. I didn't wonder. The
Edwin he remembered was a pretty different kind of a fellow.</p>
<p>"Hullo, dad," he said. "Fancy meeting you here. Have a cigarette?"</p>
<p>He shoved out his case. Old man Craye helped himself in a sort of dazed
way.</p>
<p>"You <i>are</i> Edwin?" he said slowly.</p>
<p>I began to sidle out. They didn't notice me. They had moved to a settee,
and Edwin seemed to be telling his father a funny story.</p>
<p>At least, he was talking and grinning, and the old man was making a noise
like distant thunder, which I supposed was his way of chuckling. I slid
out and left them.</p>
<p>Some days later Duggie called on me. The old boy was looking scared.</p>
<p>"Reggie," he said, "what do doctors call it when you think you see things
when you don't? Hal-something. I've got it, whatever it is. It's sometimes
caused by overwork. But it can't be that with me, because I've not been
doing any work. You don't think my brain's going or anything like that, do
you?"</p>
<p>"What do you mean? What's been happening?"</p>
<p>"It's like being haunted. I read a story somewhere of a fellow who kept
thinking he saw a battleship bearing down on him. I've got it, too. Four
times in the last three days I could have sworn I saw my father and Edwin.
I saw them as plainly as I see you. And, of course, Edwin's at home and
father's in Europe somewhere. Do you think it's some sort of a warning? Do
you think I'm going to die?"</p>
<p>"It's all right, old top," I said. "As a matter of fact, they are both in
New York just now."</p>
<p>"You don't mean that? Great Scot, what a relief! But, Reggie, old fox, it
couldn't have been them really. The last time was at Louis Martin's, and
the fellow I mistook for Edwin was dancing all by himself in the middle of
the floor."</p>
<p>I admitted it was pretty queer.</p>
<p>I was away for a few days after that in the country. When I got back I
found a pile of telegrams waiting for me. They were all from Florence, and
they all wanted me to go to Madison Avenue. The last of the batch, which
had arrived that morning, was so peremptory that I felt as if something
had bitten me when I read it.</p>
<p>For a moment I admit I hung back. Then I rallied. There are times in a
man's life when he has got to show a flash of the old bulldog pluck, don't
you know, if he wants to preserve his self-respect. I did then. My grip
was still unpacked. I told my man to put it on a cab. And in about two
ticks I was bowling off to the club. I left for England next day by the <i>Lusitania</i>.</p>
<p>About three weeks later I fetched up at Nice. You can't walk far at Nice
without bumping into a casino. The one I hit my first evening was the
Casino Municipale in the Place Massina. It looked more or less of a Home
From Home, so I strolled in.</p>
<p>There was quite a crowd round the boule tables, and I squashed in. And
when I'd worked through into the front rank I happened to look down the
table, and there was Edwin, with a green Tyrolese hat hanging over one
ear, clutching out for a lot of five-franc pieces which the croupier was
steering toward him at the end of a rake.</p>
<p>I was feeling lonesome, for I knew no one in the place, so I edged round
in his direction.</p>
<p>Halfway there I heard my name called, and there was Mrs. Darrell.</p>
<p>I saw the whole thing in a flash. Old man Craye hadn't done a thing to
prevent it—apart from being eccentric, he was probably glad that
Edwin had had the sense to pick out anybody half as good a sort—and
the marriage had taken place. And here they were on their honeymoon.</p>
<p>I wondered what Florence was thinking of it.</p>
<p>"Well, well, well, here we all are," I said. "I've just seen Edwin. He
seems to be winning."</p>
<p>"Dear boy!" she said. "He does enjoy it so. I think he gets so much more
out of life than he used to, don't you?"</p>
<p>"Sure thing. May I wish you happiness? Why didn't you let me know and
collect the silver fish-slice?"</p>
<p>"Thank you so much, Mr. Pepper. I did write to you, but I suppose you
never got the letter."</p>
<p>"Mr. Craye didn't make any objections, then?"</p>
<p>"On the contrary. He was more in favor of the marriage than anyone."</p>
<p>"And I'll tell you why," I said. "I'm rather a chump, you know, but I
observe things. I bet he was most frightfully grateful to you for taking
Edwin in hand and making him human."</p>
<p>"Why, you're wonderful, Mr. Pepper. That is exactly what he said himself.
It was that that first made us friends."</p>
<p>"And—er—Florence?"</p>
<p>She sighed.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid Florence has taken the thing a little badly. But I hope to win
her over in time. I want all my children to love me."</p>
<p>"All your what?"</p>
<p>"I think of them as my children, you see, Mr. Pepper. I adopted them as my
own when I married their father. Did you think I had married Edwin? What a
funny mistake. I am very fond of Edwin, but not in that way. No, I married
Mr. Craye. We left him at our villa tonight, as he had some letters to get
off. You must come and see us, Mr. Pepper. I always feel that it was you
who brought us together, you know. I wonder if you will be seeing Florence
when you get back? Will you give her my very best love?"</p>
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